Claudio Martelli | |
---|---|
Minister of Justice | |
In office 2 February 1991 –10 February 1993 | |
Prime Minister | Giulio Andreotti Giuliano Amato |
Preceded by | Giuliano Vassalli |
Succeeded by | Giovanni Conso |
Deputy Prime Minister of Italy | |
In office 22 July 1989 –28 June 1992 | |
Prime Minister | Giulio Andreotti |
Preceded by | Gianni De Michelis |
Succeeded by | Giuseppe Tatarella Roberto Maroni |
Member of the European Parliament | |
In office 20 July 1999 –19 July 2004 | |
Constituency | Central Italy |
In office 24 July 1984 –24 July 1989 | |
Constituency | Central Italy |
Member of the Chamber of Deputies | |
In office 20 June 1979 –14 April 1994 | |
Constituency | Mantua (1979–1987;1992–1994) Palermo (1987–1992) |
Personal details | |
Born | Gessate,Italy | 24 September 1943
Political party | PRI (1956–1966) PSI (1966–1994) SDI (1998–2000) LS (2000–2001) NPSI (2001–2005) |
Height | 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) |
Spouse | |
Alma mater | University of Milan |
Occupation | Politician, university professor, journalist |
Claudio Martelli (born 24 September 1943) is an Italian former politician and journalist. He is the editor-in-chief of the former Italian Socialist Party (PSI) newspaper Avanti! The right-hand man of Bettino Craxi, the PSI leader and Prime Minister of Italy from 1983 to 1987, Martelli was Deputy Prime Minister of Italy from 1989 to 1992 and Minister of Justice from 1991 to 1993, when he was implicated in the Tangentopoli scandal and left politics.
Martelli returned to politics in 1997 and re-founded Mondoperaio , a PSI-affiliated cultural magazine, and joined the Italian Democratic Socialists (SDI), becoming in 1999 a Member of the European Parliament (MEP), a position he first held with the PSI between 1984 and 1989. In 2001, he joined the centre-right coalition-affiliated New Italian Socialist Party (NPSI) and unsuccessfully ran for the Chamber of Deputies, a position he also held with the PSI from 1979 to 1994.
After again ending his party politics career in 2005, Martelli became a television presenter and re-launched Avanti!
Martelli was born at Gessate, in the province of Milan. He graduated in Philosophy at the University of Milan and later worked there as assistant for the faculty of Letters and Philosophy of the same university. Martelli ended his academic career in 1976 to focus on politics. [1]
Martelli joined the PSI in 1966. In 1976, he was called by party leader Bettino Craxi to continue his career in Rome. He was elected to the Italian Parliament in 1979 and became vice-leader (with Valdo Spini) of the party in 1981. He was also elected for the PSI at the European Parliament in 1984. In 1989, he was nominated as vice-president of the Council of Ministers and in 1991 became Minister of Justice in both of the governments of Giulio Andreotti (1989–1992). In 1990, the Italian Immigration law known as the Martelli Law was passed in Parliament. [1] During Tangentopoli, he ran for the party leadership after the resignation of Craxi, who was accused of corruption. His candidacy was blown off by his involvement in the 7 million dollar bribe in 1980 and resigned as Minister of Justice. [2]
Martelli exited the political world to deal with his judicial cases. In 1997, after concluding his legal battles, he founded Mondoperaio (former magazine of the PSI). In the same year, he was elected to the European Parliament for the SDI. In 2000, he left the SDI and joined the NPSI. He became spokesman for the party but was not elected to the Italian Parliament in 2001 and left the party in 2005. That same year, for a second time, he left party politics and became a presenter of several television programs. On 1 May 2020, he brought back Avanti! to the newsstands. [1]
In the Tangentopoli scandal, regarding the illicit financing of the PSI, Martelli was sentenced to 8 months in prison in 2000, suspended on probation, after confessing, for having received ₤500 million in the case of the Enimont maxi-tangent. [3] According to court documents, Roberto Calvi paid bribes to Martelli during the Banco Ambrosiano affair; however, he was not convicted in this case. His name was again brought to the attention of the judicial chronicles as part of the State-Mafia Pact trial, when the ex Cosa nostra killer Francesco Onorato told of the start of the strategy of the massacres prepared by Totò Riina after the sentence of the trial. He said: "In the list of people to kill, as I learned from Salvatore Biondino, the ambassador of the commission, there were Lima, Andreotti and his son, the former ministers Mannino, Vizzini, but also Martelli. We were the ones who had Martelli elected as minister of Justice: in 1987 we had financed his electoral campaign with ₤200 million. And then Martelli kept his promises, because he gave to some members of the mafia the hospital arrests." [4]
In 2022, Martelli married Lia Quartapalla, a deputy from the Democratic Party. [1]
Election | House | Constituency | Party | Votes | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | Chamber of Deputies | Mantua–Cremona | PSI | 14,813 | Elected | |
1983 | Chamber of Deputies | Mantua–Cremona | PSI | 18,905 | Elected | |
1984 | European Parliament | Central Italy | PSI | 255,249 | Elected | |
1987 | Chamber of Deputies | Palermo–Trapani–Agrigento–Caltanissetta | PSI | 116,984 | Elected | |
1992 | Chamber of Deputies | Mantua–Cremona | PSI | 27,003 | Elected | |
1999 | European Parliament | Central Italy | SDI | 35,827 | Elected | |
Benedetto "Bettino" Craxi was an Italian politician, leader of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) from 1976 to 1993, and the 45th prime minister of Italy from 1983 to 1987. He was the first PSI member to become prime minister and the second from a socialist party to hold the office. He led the third-longest government in the Italian Republic and he is considered one of the most powerful and prominent politicians of the First Italian Republic.
Arnaldo Forlani was an Italian politician who served as the prime minister of Italy from 1980 to 1981. He also held the office of deputy prime minister, minister of foreign affairs, and minister of defence.
The New Italian Socialist Party or New PSI, more recently styled as Liberal Socialists – NPSI, is a political party in Italy which professes a social-democratic ideology and claims to be the successor to the historical Italian Socialist Party, which was disbanded after the judiciary tempest of the early 1990s.
The Italian Democratic Socialists was a social-democratic political party in Italy. The party was the direct continuation of the Italian Socialists, the legal successor of the historical Italian Socialist Party. The Italian Democratic Socialist Party, the other long-time Italian social-democratic party, was merged into it along with other minor parties. The party's long-time leader was Enrico Boselli, a former president of Emilia-Romagna (1990–1993). In 2007, the SDI were merged with other descendants of the PSI to form the modern-day Italian Socialist Party.
Ottaviano Del Turco is an Italian politician.
Gianni De Michelis was an Italian politician, a member of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), who served as minister in many Italian governments in the 1980s and early 1990s.
The Italian Socialist Party was a social-democratic and democratic-socialist political party in Italy, whose history stretched for longer than a century, making it one of the longest-living parties of the country. Founded in Genoa in 1892, the PSI was from the beginning a big tent of Italy's political left and socialism, ranging from the revolutionary socialism of Andrea Costa to the Marxist-inspired reformist socialism of Filippo Turati and the anarchism of Anna Kuliscioff. Under Turati's leadership, the party was a frequent ally of the Italian Republican Party and the Italian Radical Party at the parliamentary level, while lately entering in dialogue with the remnants of the Historical Left and the Liberal Union during Giovanni Giolitti's governments to ensure representation for the labour movement and the working class. In the 1900s and 1910s, the PSI achieved significant electoral success, becoming Italy's first party in 1919 and during the country's Biennio Rosso in 1921, when it was victim of violent paramilitary activities from the far right, and was not able to move the country in the revolutionary direction it wanted.
The Italian Socialists was a minor social-democratic political party in Italy.
Carlo Vizzini is an Italian politician. He was involved in the corruption scandal of Tangentopoli. Vizzini was found guilty but benefited from the statute of limitations and did not serve his sentence.
Ugo Intini was an Italian journalist and politician.
The Socialist Party was a tiny social-democratic political party in Italy.
The Socialist League was a tiny social-democratic party in Italy, founded by Bobo Craxi on 10 May 2000.
The Italian Socialist Party is a social-democratic political party in Italy. The party was founded in 2007–2008 by the merger of the following social-democratic parties and groups: Enrico Boselli's Italian Democratic Socialists, the faction of the New Italian Socialist Party led by Gianni De Michelis, The Italian Socialists of Bobo Craxi, Democracy and Socialism of Gavino Angius, the Association for the Rose in the Fist of Lanfranco Turci, Socialism is Freedom of Rino Formica and some other minor organisations. Until October 2009, the party was known as Socialist Party.
Francesco de Martino was an Italian jurist, politician, lifetime senator (1991–2002) and former Vice President of the Council of Ministers. He was considered by many to be the conscience of the Italian Socialist Party.
Salvatore Formica, best known as Rino Formica, is a former Italian politician.
The 1992 Italian presidential election was held in Italy on 13–25 May 1992, following the resignation of President Francesco Cossiga on 28 April 1992.
The Pentapartito, commonly shortened to CAF, refers to the coalition government of five Italian political parties that formed between June 1981 and April 1991. The pro-European and Atlanticist coalition comprised the Christian Democracy (DC), the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI), Italian Liberal Party (PLI), and Italian Republican Party (PRI).
Claudio Signorile is an Italian politician.
Gian Paolo Pillitteri is an Italian former politician, film critic, and journalist. He was affiliated with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI). Pillitteri began his political career when the PSI and PSDI were unified. Following the 1969 party split, he joined the PSDI, which at the time was known as the Unitary Socialist Party (PSU), before it became the PSDI in 1971.
Lucio Barani is an Italian politician and surgeon.