Pier Luigi Bersani Explained

Pier Luigi Bersani
Office1:Secretary of the Democratic Party
Deputy1:Enrico Letta
Term Start1:7 November 2009
Term End1:20 April 2013
Predecessor1:Dario Franceschini
Successor1:Guglielmo Epifani
Office2:Minister of Economic Development
Primeminister2:Romano Prodi
Term Start2:17 May 2006
Term End2:8 May 2008
Successor2:Claudio Scajola
Office3:Minister of Transports and Navigation
Primeminister3:Massimo D'Alema
Term Start3:22 December 1999
Term End3:11 June 2001
Predecessor3:Tiziano Treu
Office4:Minister of Industry, Commerce and Craftmanship
Primeminister4:Romano Prodi
Term Start4:18 May 1996
Term End4:22 December 1999
Predecessor4:Alberto Clò
Successor4:Enrico Letta
Office5:President of Emilia-Romagna
Term Start5:6 July 1993
Term End5:17 May 1996
Predecessor5:Enrico Boselli
Successor5:Antonio La Forgia
Office6:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start6:28 April 2006
Term End6:13 October 2022
Constituency6:Emilia-Romagna (2001–2013; 2018–2022)
Lombardy (2013–2018)
Term Start7:30 May 2001
Term End7:19 July 2004
Constituency7:Emilia-Romagna
Office8:Member of the European Parliament
Term Start8:20 July 2004
Term End8:27 April 2006
Constituency8:North-West Italy
Birth Date:29 September 1951
Birth Place:Bettola, Piacenza, Italy
Party:PCI (before 1991)
PDS (1991–1998)
DS (1998–2007)
PD (2007–2017; since 2023)
Art1 (2017–2023)
Spouse:Daniela Ferrari
Children:2 daughters
Alma Mater:University of Bologna
Signature:Pierluigi Bersani signature.svg
Height:1.8m (05.9feet)

Pier Luigi Bersani (pronounced as /it/; born 29 September 1951) is an Italian politician and was Secretary of the Democratic Party (PD), Italy's leading centre-left party, from 2009 to 2013. Bersani was Minister of Industry, Commerce and Craftmanship from 1996 to 1999, President of Emilia-Romagna from 1993 to 1996, Minister of Transport from 1999 to 2001, and Minister of Economic Development from 2006 to 2008.

Early life

Pier Luigi Bersani was born on 29 September 1951 in Bettola, a mountain municipality in Nure Valley, in the province of Piacenza, Emilia-Romagna region, Italy. His father was a mechanic and a gas station clerk. After earning his high-school degree in Piacenza, Bersani enrolled in the University of Bologna where he graduated in philosophy with a dissertation on Pope Gregory I. He married Daniela in 1980, and he has two daughters: Elisa and Margherita. After a short experience as a teacher he committed his life to politics and public administration.[1]

Political career

Early political career

Bersani joined the Italian Communist Party and subsequently the Democratic Party of the Left. As member of the National Secretariat of the Democrats of the Left, he was responsible for the economic sector. As a young man, he became Vice-President of the Mountain Community of Piacenza, then elected in the Regional Council of Emilia-Romagna region and Vice-President of Emilia-Romagna in 1990; he was President of Emilia-Romagna from 1993 to 1996.

Centre-left cabinets (1996–2001)

After the general election of 1996 he was Minister of Industry, Commerce and Craftmanship (1996–1999) and Minister of Transports (1999–2001) in the centre-left cabinets of Prodi, D'Alema, Amato.

European Parliament (2004–2006)

In 2004, he was elected to the European Parliament representing the North-West region for the Democrats of the Left, part of the Socialist Group, and sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs. He was a substitute for the Committee on the Internal Market and Consumer Protection, a member of the Delegation to the European Union-Kazakhstan, EU-Kyrgyzstan and EU-Uzbekistan Parliamentary Cooperation Committees, and for relations with Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Mongolia, and a substitute for the Delegation for relations with Belarus. He left the European Parliament on his re-election to the Chamber of Deputies in 2006, and he was appointed as Minister of Economic Development in the government of Prime Minister Romano Prodi on 17 May 2006.

Prodi II Cabinet (2006–2008)

The Prodi II Cabinet assigned Bersani, as the Minister of Economic Development, the task of introducing reforms aimed at achieving increased market liberalization and competition. The minister responded with Decree Law 223 of 30 June 2006, later converted into Law 248/2006, popularly known as the "Bersani 1" decree on taxi drivers and pharmacies, although it also addressed other sectors. In 2021, Bersani said that economic liberalization does not mean entrusting everything to the market, which he describes as liberismo, right-wing, and distinct. In his view, liberalization means defending the common citizen from the market and ensuring that there are no dominant positions.[2]

The government's policy of competition and liberalization would not to stop there. "Bersani 1" was followed by "Bersani 2" (decree 7 of 31 January 2007, converted into Law 40 of 2 April 2007), and then by a series of bills for the liberalization of the professions and television broadcasting, local public services, and energy, as well as the reduction and simplification of times and procedures for the start up of new businesses. Another bill proposed to rationalize the jurisdictions of the regulatory authorities, modifying and reinforcing their powers, particularly with regard to competition. Still another bill would introduce and regulate the judicial procedures for class action lawsuits.[3]

Secretary of the Democratic Party of Italy (2009–2013)

On 25 October 2009, Bersani defeated incumbents Dario Franceschini and Ignazio Marino in the Democratic Party leadership election, thus becoming Italy's main opposition leader, scoring 55.1% among party members.[4] Since 7 November 2009, as decided by the National Assembly, Pier Luigi Bersani officially took office as Secretary of the Democratic Party of Italy.[5] He defeated the mayor of Florence Matteo Renzi in the 2012 primary election.[6]

2013 elections

Before the 2013 Italian general election, the Democratic Party was ahead but at "the beginning of the year, Bersani’s party was above 40%, and former centre-right Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was hovering around 25%. By the time [reported] polling stopped [a week before the vote], the right was up to 30% and the left down to 35%. Outgoing appointed-technocrat Prime Minister Mario Monti's centrist party-coalition was at less than 15% of the vote and the protest Five-Star Movement led by comedian Beppe Grillo was getting more than 15%".[7]

In the general elections on 24–25 February 2013, as a consequence of the electoral system the PD-led centre-left coalition, Italy Common Good, took a small absolute majority in the lower house. In most of the rest of Europe, this would have been enough to make Bersani Prime Minister. However, the coalition failed to gain a majority in the Senate. Unlike in most parliamentary systems, the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate have equal power, and Italian governments must maintain the confidence of both chambers in order to stay in office. Bersani said he would try to form a government with the informal support of Five Star Movement. Anna Finocchiaro, PD's leader in the Senate, confirmed the likelihood PD would not form a new coalition with Berlusconi's centre-right coalition.[8]

On 22 March President Giorgio Napolitano asked Bersani to form a new government.[9] On 27 March Bersani failed to strike a deal for forming a new Italian government with the grassroots Five-Star Movement (M5S) which held the balance of power after February's inconclusive elections. On 19 April Bersani announced he would be stepping down from his post as Democratic Party leader after Romano Prodi failed to secure a parliamentary majority in the presidential election.[10]

Other activities

In 2001, Bersani co-founded with Vincenzo Visco the NENS ("New Economy, New Society") think tank.[11] He is also chairman of the Nuova Romea Society that was established in 2002 with the objective of the development of Emilia-Romagna and Veneto territories.

Electoral history

width=12%Electionwidth=35%Housewidth=25%Constituencywidth=5% colspan="2"Partywidth=12%Voteswidth=12%Result
1980Regional Council of Emilia-RomagnaPiacenzaPCI2,991 Elected
1985Regional Council of Emilia-RomagnaPiacenzaPCI3,623 Elected
1990Regional Council of Emilia-RomagnaPiacenzaPCI3,690 Elected
1995Regional Council of Emilia-RomagnaEmilia-Romagna-at-largePDS Elected
2001Chamber of DeputiesFidenzaDS47,303 Elected
2004European ParliamentNorth-West ItalyDS346,683 Elected
2006Chamber of DeputiesEmilia-RomagnaDS Elected
2008Chamber of DeputiesEmilia-RomagnaPD Elected
2013Chamber of DeputiesLombardy 2PD Elected
2018Chamber of DeputiesEmilia-RomagnaLeU Elected

First-past-the-post elections

2001 general election (C): Fidenza
CandidateCoalitionVotes%
Pier Luigi BersaniThe Olive Tree (DS)47,30349.5
Paolo PagliaHouse of Freedoms (FI)42,37444.4
align=left colspan=2Others5,8136.1
align=left colspan=3Total95,490100.0

Honours

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Pier Luigi Bersani biografia, Partito Democratico webpage. Content confirmed via Google Translate 20 February 2013.
  2. Web site: Minotti . Gabriele . 9 November 2021 . Bersani, Calenda e il liberismo . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20211109112230/http://www.opinione.it/politica/2021/11/09/gabriele-minotti_bersani-calenda-liberismo-mercato-socialismo-economia/ . 9 November 2021 . 30 January 2023 . L'Opinione delle Libertà . it.
  3. Survey of Economic and Financial Policy Measures. https://web.archive.org/web/20120302092905/http://www.unicreditreviews.com/uploads/06_costir_rev.pdf . 2 March 2012 . UniCredit. Bruno Costi. 2007. 8 January 2010.
  4. I dati definitivi dei congressi di circolo – Partito Democratico
  5. News: Pd, Bersani proclamato segretario "Adesso prepariamo l'alternativa". La Repubblica. 11 July 2009. 11 July 2009. it.
  6. Web site: Coppola . Alessio . 2022-06-01 . Pier Luigi Bersani, la biografia del politico italiano . 2022-06-03 . True News. . it-IT.
  7. [Matthew Lynn|Lynn, Matthew]
  8. Delamaide, Darrell, "Bersani's weak win in Italy may be his strength", MarketWatch, 26 February 2013. Retrieved February 2013.
  9. News: Italy's Bersani tapped to form new government . 22 March 2013 . Deutsche Welle . 22 March 2013.
  10. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-italy-vote-idUSBRE93I08I20130419 Italy center-left leader Bersani quits after vote debacle
  11. Web site: NENS Official Website . Nens.it . 7 January 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130128235154/http://www.nens.it/zone/index.php . 28 January 2013 . dead .
  12. News: Legion D'onore Al Ministro Bersani . 1999-10-29 . 2010 . From the print archives of the daily . Staffetta Quotidiana . 2499-5924 . 2022-07-22.
  13. Web site: Bersani promuove il governo su Fincantieri, ma lo boccia su Tim . 2017-08-03 . Huffington Post . it . https://web.archive.org/web/20170808202559/https://www.huffingtonpost.it/2017/08/03/bersani-promuove-il-governo-su-fincantieri-ma-lo-boccia-su-tim_a_23063078/ . 2017-08-08.