Alfredo Covelli Explained

Alfredo Covelli
Office:Member of Italian Chamber of Deputies
for Rome
Term Start:8 May 1948
Term End:19 June 1979
Birth Date:22 February 1914
Birth Place:Bonito, Italy
Death Place:Rome, Italy
Nationality:Italian
Party:PDI (1944–1946)
PNM (1946–1959)
PDIUM (1959–1972)
MSI (1972–1977)
DN (1977–1979)
Alma Mater:University of Naples Federico II
Profession:Teacher, journalist
Residence:Rome, Lazio

Alfredo Covelli (22 February 1914  - 25 December 1998) was an Italian monarchist politician. He was the leader of the Monarchist National Party.

Early life and education

Covelli was born in Bonito, Campania. He graduated in literature and philosophy, in law and political science in the second half of the 1930s, and in 1940 he was a teacher of Latin and Greek in a grammar school in Benevento. He took part in the Second World War as an officer in the Air Force, and after a series of operations in Tirana and Bari, he received a decoration for military valor.

Political career

In 1946 he was elected a Member of Parliament as a candidate for the National Bloc of Freedom and in the referendum of 2 June he voted to keep the Italy a monarchy. In July of the same year he founded the Monarchist National Party. He was elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies in 1948 and served until 1979. In the meantime he also devoted himself to journalism, becoming director of the Corriere della Nazione. In 1964 Covelli also held a management role in football, becoming advisor of the SS Lazio. In the 1970s he merged his party into the Italian Social Movement, which then became the MSI-DN (the DN standing for destra nazionale or national right). After the merger he duly became chairman of the MSI. In 1977 Covelli split from the MSI and founded National Democracy a national-conservative political party. After receiving a meager result of 0.6% of the vote in the election of 1979, Covelli retired from the political scene.

On 15 January 1998 he was appointed by Victor Emmanuel of Savoy honorary president of the honorific Council of the Senators of the Kingdom. At his request, he was buried in Bonito, his birthplace.

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