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Oscar Luigi Scalfaro

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Senatore
 Oscar Luigi Scalfaro
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro


In office
May 28, 1992 – May 15, 1999
Prime Minister Giuliano Amato
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
Silvio Berlusconi
Lamberto Dini
Romano Prodi
Massimo D'Alema
Preceded by Giovanni Spadolini acting
Francesco Cossiga
Succeeded by Nicola Mancino acting
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi

In office
April 24, 1992 – May 25, 1992
Preceded by Leonilde Iotti
Succeeded by Giorgio Napolitano

In office
July 26, 1972 – July 7, 1973
Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti
Preceded by Riccardo Misasi
Succeeded by Franco Maria Malfatti

Incumbent
Assumed office 
May 19, 1999
Preceded by New Constituency
Succeeded by None

Born September 9, 1918 (1918-09-09) (age 90)
Novara, Italy
Nationality Italian
Political party Democratic Party
Spouse Maria Inzitari (1924-1944)
Religion Roman Catholic

Oscar Luigi Scalfaro IPA[ˈskalfaro] (born September 9, 1918[1]) is an Italian politician and magistrate, member of the Christian Democracy, President of the Italian Republic from 1992 to 1999, and currently a senator for life. He currently belongs to the centre-left Democratic party.

[edit] Biography

Scalfaro was born in Novara, Province of Novara.[1]

He graduated in Law from the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore (”Catholic University of the Sacred Heart“) in Milan on June 2, 1942. On October 21, 1942 he entered the magistrature. In 1945, after the end of World War II, he became a public prosecuting attorney, and to date he is the last Italian attorney to have obtained a death sentence (but the accused was pardoned before the execution could take place). In 1946 he was elected to the Constituent Assembly and later in 1948 he became a deputy representing the district of Turin. He was re-elected ten times in a row until 1992.

In May 25, 1992 he was elected as President of the Italian Republic, after a two week stalemate of unsuccessful attempts to reach agreement. The killing of anti-Mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone prompted his election. His mandate ended in May 1999, and he automatically became a lifetime member of the Senate.

In recent times, Scalfaro was the chairman of the committee that advocated the abrogation, in the referendum of June 25 and 26, 2006, of the constitutional reform that had been passed in parliament the previous year by the former center-right majority. Along with all the center-left (and a few center-right personalities, too), Scalfaro considered it to be dangerous for national unity and for other reasons. The opponents of the reform won a landslide victory in the referendum.

Scalfaro is currently the eldest living Italian President and the second eldest senator in the Italian Senate, after Rita Levi Montalcini. He consequently took the temporary presidency of the newly-elected assembly which followed the 2006 general election, as Levi Montalcini refused the role because of her age. This made him one of the three politicians in Italian history to have presided over the three highest-ranked offices in the Italian Republic: President of the Republic, President of the Senate, and President of the Chamber of Deputies (the other two are Sandro Pertini and Enrico De Nicola).

A staunch Catholic, and in the past a rather conservative and anti-communist politician, Scalfaro is on very bad terms with Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. He supported the center-left coalition, which included two communist parties, that won the 2006 election. Despite his age, he also actively campaigned, for the "no" side, in the June 2006 referendum on a constitutional reform proposed by Berlusconi's coalition House of Freedom during its control of the government.

During the Second World War, in 1944, he lost his 20-year-old wife Maria Inzitari. Since then, he has not been married. He has a daughter, Marianna.

After the 2008 parliamentary election, he was again asked to preside as President de tempore after Rita Levi-Montalcini again refused the post, but he too refused to serve.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Page at Senate website (Italian).

[edit] External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Riccardo Misasi
Italian Minister of Public Instruction
1972 - 1973
Succeeded by
Franco Maria Malfatti
Preceded by
Virginio Rognoni
Italian Minister of the Interior
1983 - 1987
Succeeded by
Amintore Fanfani
Preceded by
Leonilde Iotti
President of the Italian Chamber of Deputies
1992
Succeeded by
Giorgio Napolitano
Preceded by
Francesco Cossiga
President of the Italian Republic
1992 - 1999
Succeeded by
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
Order of precedence
Preceded by
Francesco Cossiga
Former President of the Italian Republic
Italian order of precedence
Former President of the Italian Republic
Succeeded by
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
Former President of the Italian Republic


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