Fabio Rampelli Explained

Fabio Rampelli
Office:Vice-President of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start:13 June 2018
President:Roberto Fico
Lorenzo Fontana
Office1:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start1:21 December 2005
Constituency1:Lazio 1
Birth Date:2 August 1960
Birth Place:Rome, Italy
Profession:Politician, architect
Party:MSI (until 1995)
AN (1995–2009)
PdL (2009–2012)
FdI (since 2012)
Alma Mater:Sapienza University of Rome

Fabio Rampelli (born 2 August 1960) is an Italian politician.

Biography

Rampelli graduated in Architecture at the University of Rome "La Sapienza" and worked as an architect. He was also a member of the Italy national swimming team in 1978.[1]

In his youth, hRampelli joined the Roman Youth section of the Italian Social Movement and in 1989, together with Gianni Alemanno, he was arrested for protests in Nettuno for the arrival of George H. W. Bush. Rampelli served as municipal councilor of Rome from 1993 to 1997 and as regional councilor of Lazio from 1995 to 2005. In 2005 he was elected for the first time to the Chamber of Deputies with National Alliance. He joined later The People of Freedom and subsequently, in 2012, he followed Giorgia Meloni into Brothers of Italy. He has been chairman of the FdI's parliamentary group from 2014 to 2018, when he has been elected vice-president of the Chamber of Deputies.[2]

In 2023, Rampelli proposed a law that would outlaw the use of any language other than Italian on official documents. The law has yet to go up for parliamentary debate.[3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. http://lazio.coni.it/lazio/lazio/notizie/notizie-2/8962-convegno-futuro-e-societ%C3%A0-la-responsabilit%C3%A0-sociale-dello-sport-in-italia.html Convegno. Futuro e società: la responsabilità sociale dello sport in Italia.
  2. https://www.secoloditalia.it/2018/06/rampelli-eletto-vicepresidente-della-camera-sostituisce-il-ministro-fontana/ Rampelli eletto vicepresidente della Camera. Gli auguri di Meloni e La Russa
  3. Web site: Nadeau . Barbie Latza . 2023-04-01 . Italian government seeks to penalize the use of English words . 2023-06-19 . CNN . en.
  4. Web site: 2023-04-04 . A new law proposed in Italy would ban English — and violators could face fines of up to $110K - CBS News . 2023-06-19 . www.cbsnews.com . en-US.