Leoluca Orlando

Leoluca Orlando
Mayor of Palermo
Assumed office
22 May 2012
Preceded by Luisa Latella
In office
3 December 1993  16 December 2000
Preceded by Vittorio Piraneo
Succeeded by Guglielmo Serio
In office
9 July 1990  14 August 1990
Preceded by Andrea Gentile
Succeeded by Domenico Lo Vasco
In office
16 July 1985  12 March 1990
Preceded by Gianfranco Vitocolonna
Succeeded by Andrea Gentile
Personal details
Born (1947-08-01) August 1, 1947
Palermo
Nationality Italian
Relations Married
Alma mater University of Palermo
Occupation Politician
Religion Roman Catholicism

Leoluca Orlando (born 1 August 1947), is an Italian politician and current Mayor of Palermo. He was also mayor of the city in 1985–1990 and 1993–2000.[1] He is best known for his strong opposition to the Sicilian Mafia, but also for his vocal criticism of Giovanni Falcone, a leading prosecuting magistrate murdered by Cosa Nostra in 1992.

Biography

Orlando was born in Palermo. He graduated in jurisprudence and worked as lawyer and professor at the University of Palermo.

He was a member of Christian Democracy (DC), in the left wing of the party. He entered politics in 1976 as legal adviser to Christian Democratic reformer Piersanti Mattarella, who became president of the Sicilian Region in 1978. The two men set out to break the Mafia's hold on the island, transferring budget authority from the corrupt regional government back to the cities and passing a law enforcing the same building standards used in the rest of Italy, thereby making the Mafia's building schemes illegal.[2] In retaliation, the Mafia killed Mattarella in January 1980.

The brother of Mattarella and other associates urged him to run for the Palermo municipal council, he ran successfully, and was elected mayor by the town council in 1985.[2] From 1985-1990 he was elected mayor of Palermo, and received many threats as a result of his open opposition to the power of the Mafia in the city. He was re-elected as mayor in 1993 with 75.2% of the vote. In 1992 he was also elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies. Two years later he became a member of the European Parliament.

After the dissolution of DC, he founded a popular movement called The Network ("La Rete"), which in 1999 joined with Romano Prodi's Democrats. In 2001 he was among the founders of The Daisy, an Italian party currently including most of the former left-wing members of DC.

Since 2000, he has been the President of the "Sicilian Renaissance Institute" a non-profit organization dealing with the promotion of economy and culture of lawfulness and Human rights.[3]

In December 2000 he resigned from the position of mayor and was a candidate for the presidency of the autonomous region of Sicily. He was, however, defeated by the centre-right candidate Salvatore Cuffaro. In 2006 he was expelled from the Daisy party, after having shown his full support for the candidacy of Rita Borsellino in the Sicilian presidential centre-left primary election, contrary to the line of his party that supported its member Ferdinando Latteri. He subsequently joined the Italy of Values of Antonio Di Pietro with whom he was elected at the Italian Chamber of Deputies. He has been the President of the Parliamentary Commission for Regional affairs.

In April 2008 he was re-elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies.

On May 2007 he ran as centre-left candidate for mayor of Palermo, after having won the centre-left primary election in a landslide with about 72% of the votes. He however lost to incumbent Diego Cammarata of the House of Freedoms, who obtained about 53% of votes compared with Orlando's 45%.[4] Following the results, Orlando denounced massive electoral frauds and asked for the annulment of the vote.[5]

In March 2012 he announced his candidacy for Mayor of Palermo as an independent in the May elections, after having unsuccessfully supported Rita Borsellino's mayoral bid in a controversial primary election won by his former protégé Fabrizio Ferrandelli. In the first round, held on 5 May 2012, he was the most voted candidate with 48% of votes despite being only supported by his own Italy of Values and a number of minor left-wing parties (Federation of the Greens and Federation of the Left). He took part in the final round against second-placed Ferrandelli and on 21 May he won the runoff with 72% of the vote.[6]

References

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