Aldo Aniasi Explained

Aldo Aniasi
Honorific-Suffix:OMRI
Office:Minister of Regional Affairs
Primeminister:Giovanni Spadolini
Term Start:28 June 1981
Term End:1 December 1982
Predecessor:Roberto Mazzotta
Successor:Fabio Fabbri
Office1:Minister of Health
Primeminister1:Francesco Cossiga,
Arnaldo Forlani
Term Start1:4 April 1980
Term End1:26 June 1981
Predecessor1:Renato Altissimo
Successor1:Renato Altissimo
Office2:Member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies
Term Start2:5 July 1976
Term End2:14 April 1994
Constituency2:Milan
Office3:Mayor of Milan
Term Start3:13 December 1967
Term End3:12 May 1976
Predecessor3:Pietro Bucalossi
Successor3:Carlo Tognoli
Birth Date:31 May 1921
Birth Place:Palmanova, Italy
Death Place:Milan, Italy
Profession:Surveyor

Aldo Aniasi, OMRI[1] (31 May 1921 – 27 August 2005) was an Italian politician.

Biography

Aniasi was born in Palmanova, in Friuli. In 1943 he joined the Brigate Garibaldi, the paramilitary wing of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) in the Italian resistance. He fought in Piedmont, in Valsesia and Ossola. In 1945 he was briefly the lieutenant for the National Liberation Committee in Milan.

After the war Aniasi left the PCI, adhering (after 1947) to the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI). Aniasi was a councilman of Milan from 1951 to 1967, when he became Mayor of the city following the resignation of Pietro Bucalossi; he contributed to Bucalossi's fall by leaving the PSDI to join the Italian Socialist Party (PSI).[2] Mayor during the "Years of Lead", Aniasi was often in disagreement with the prefect Libero Mazza: while the latter supported law and order policies against the Red Brigades and other terrorists, Aniasi supported disarming the police instead. Aniasi was also criticized for seemingly downplaying terrorism.

In 1976, he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, where he remained until 1994. In the 1980s, he was Minister of Health in the Cossiga II and Forlani Cabinets. As Minister, he created the National Health Service.

After 1994, he left politics temporarily before joining the Democrats of the Left (DS), becoming a member of its directive council. He died in Milan in 2005 and is buried at the city's Monumental Cemetery.[3]

Electoral history

width=12%Electionwidth=23%Housewidth=34%Constituencywidth=5% colspan="2"Partywidth=12%Voteswidth=12%Result
1976Chamber of DeputiesMilan–PaviaPSI65,962 Elected
1979Chamber of DeputiesMilan–PaviaPSI39,565 Elected
1983Chamber of DeputiesMilan–PaviaPSI29,863 Elected
1987Chamber of DeputiesMilan–PaviaPSI45,675 Elected
1992Chamber of DeputiesMilan–PaviaPSI11,903 Elected

Honour

Notes and References

  1. http://www.quirinale.it/onorificenze/DettaglioDecorato.asp?idprogressivo=34400&iddecorato=33947
  2. http://www.fondazionealdoaniasi.it/home/aldo-aniasi Le tappe di una vita di impegno politico
  3. http://www.repubblica.it/2005/h/sezioni/politica/aniasi/aniasi/aniasi.html Milano perde Aldo Aniasi sindaco socialista e partigiano
  4. Web site: Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana . October 24, 2022. www.quirinale.it.