Pensioners' Party (Italy) Explained

Pensioners' Party
Native Name:Partito Pensionati
Leader1 Title:Secretary
Leader1 Name:Carlo Fatuzzo
Leader2 Title:President
Leader2 Name:Giacinto Boldrini
Foundation:19 October 1987
Split:Pensioners' National Party
Headquarters:Piazza Risorgimento, 14 Bergamo
Ideology:Pensioners' interests
Single issue politics
Conservatism[1]
National:The Union
(2005–2007)
House of Freedoms
(2007–2008)
The People of Freedom
(2008–2013)
Centre-right coalition
(2013–2022)
European:European Democrats
Seats1 Title:Chamber of Deputies
Seats2 Title:Senate
Seats3 Title:European Parliament
Seats4 Title:Regional
Councils
Website:www.partitopensionati.it
Country:Italy

The Pensioners' Party (Partito Pensionati, PP) is a centrist Italian political party, whose aim is to represent the interests of pensioners.

History

The Pensioners' Party was founded in 1987 in Milan, and its current leader is Carlo Fatuzzo.

In the 2004 European Parliament election, it gained 1.1% of the national vote and elected its leader to the European Parliament, where he sits in the European People's Party–European Democrats group.

On 4 February 2006, the party joined The Union, the centre-left coalition led by Romano Prodi, and was decisive in the result of the 2006 general election (the PP scored 0.9% and the centre-left won by a 0.1% margin), but soon after the election the alliance with the centre-left turned cold and tense. In the European Parliament, Antonio Tajani (Forza Italia, Vice President of the European People's Party), tried successfully to convince Fatuzzo to return to the centre-right coalition.

Finally, on 20 November 2006, Carlo Fatuzzo, in a press conference along with Antonio Tajani and Fabrizio Cicchitto (national deputy-coordinator of Forza Italia), announced that its party was re-joining the centre-right House of Freedoms coalition.

In the 2008 general election the Pensioners' Party presented its candidates into The People of Freedom, but it didn't gained any seat.

In the 2009 European Parliament election, the party ran as part of The Autonomy, an electoral coalition including The Right, the Movement for the Autonomies and the Alliance of the Centre.[2] [3]

In 2012 the party enters for the first time in the Italian Parliament with one deputy, Lino Miserotti, who replaces the outgoing deputy Marco Airaghi, and with one senator, Giacinto Boldrini, who replaces the deceased senator Gianpiero Carlo Cantoni.

In the 2013 general election the Pensioners' Party ran with the Centre-right coalition, getting only the 0.16% of the vote for the Chamber and the 0.40% for the Senate.

In the 2018 general election the party signed a cooperation Agreement with Forza Italia and some members of the party were candidate in FI's lists, including party's secretary Carlo Fatuzzo, who was elected in the Chamber of Deputies.

Electoral results

Italian Parliament

Chamber of Deputies
Election year
  1. of
    overall votes
% of
overall vote
  1. of
    overall seats won
+/–Leader
1992220,509 (#14)0.56Carlo Fatuzzo
199415,671 (#26)0.04Carlo Fatuzzo
200168,439 (#17)0.18Carlo Fatuzzo
2006333,278 (#12)0.87Carlo Fatuzzo
2008into The People of FreedomCarlo Fatuzzo
201354,854 (#19)0.16Carlo Fatuzzo
2018into Forza ItaliaCarlo Fatuzzo
Senate of the Republic
Election year
  1. of
    overall votes
% of
overall vote
  1. of
    overall seats won
+/–Leader
1992215,889 (#13)0.65Carlo Fatuzzo
1994250,637 (#7)0.76Carlo Fatuzzo
199660,640 (#16)0.19Carlo Fatuzzo
200178,572 (#15)0.23Carlo Fatuzzo
2006340,565 (#12)1.00Carlo Fatuzzo
2008into The People of FreedomCarlo Fatuzzo
2013123,457 (#13)0.40
2018Carlo Fatuzzo

European Parliament

Election year
  1. of
    overall votes
% of
overall vote
  1. of
    overall seats won
+/–Leader
1989162,293 (#14)0.47
1999233,874 (#17)0.75
2004374,343 (#14)1.15
2009into The Autonomy
2019

Regional Councils

RegionLatest election
  1. of
    overall votes
% of
overall vote
  1. of
    overall seats won
Abruzzo2014
Aosta Valley2013
Apulia2015
Basilicata2013
Calabria2014
Campania2015
Emilia-Romagna2014
Friuli-Venezia Giulia20133,741 (#13)0.9
Lazio2013
Liguria2015
Lombardy201820,259 (#13)0.38
Marche2015
Molise2013
Piedmont201413,837 (#12)0.7
Sardinia2014
Sicily2012
Tuscany2015
Trentino-Alto Adige2013
Umbria2015
Veneto201514,625 (#14)0.8

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Parties and Elections in Europe. 2021. 318. Books on Demand . 9783754355848 .
  2. Web site: あがり症の対策方法について . 19 May 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150604151622/http://www.partitoladestra.com/?costante_pagina=polo_autonomia&id_lingua=2 . 4 June 2015 .
  3. Web site: Iris Press - EUROPEE: INSIEME MPA, ALLEANZA DI CENTRO, LA DESTRA, PENSIONATI . 22 April 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111006090338/http://www.irispress.it/Iris/page.asp?VisImg=S&Art=33035&Cat=1&I=null&IdTipo=0&TitoloBlocco=Italia&Codi_Cate_Arti=18 . 6 October 2011 .