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Pino Pisicchio

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Pino Pisicchio
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
30 May 2001 – 22 March 2018
In office
2 July 1987 – 14 April 1994
Member of the European Parliament
In office
1 July 1999 – 1 July 2004
Personal details
Born (1954-05-23) 23 May 1954 (age 70)
Corato, Apulia, Italy
Political partyDC (until 1994)
RI (1997–2002)
DL (2002–2006)
IdV (2006–2009)
ApI (2009–2012)
CD (2012–2014)
PDE (since 2014)
Alma materUniversity of Bari

Giuseppe "Pino" Pisicchio (born 23 May 1954) is an Italian politician, journalist, essayist and professor.

Biography

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Pino Pisicchio graduated in law with honors from the University of Bari. A member of the Christian Democracy, first in the current of Aldo Moro and then in left-wing current of Carlo Donat-Cattin, Pisicchio was elected for the first time to the Chamber of Deputies in 1987, with about 80,000 preference votes, and was re-confirmed also in 1992. He served as Undersecretary for Finance in the first Amato Government and then as Undersecretary for Public Works in the Ciampi Government.

In 1997 he joined Italian Renewal, of which he was National Coordinator. In 1999 he elected to the European Parliament and joined the Group of the European People's Party - European Democrats, holding the positions of Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Budgets and of the Delegation to the EU-Maghreb Joint Parliamentary Committee. In 2001 he was re-elected to the Chamber among the ranks of The Daisy, in which Italian Renewal had merged.

In 2006 he joined the Italy of Values and was re-elected to the Chamber of Deputies. Re-elected again to the Chamber in 2008, he became Vice President of the Committee for Elections. In November 2009 he left the IdV because, in his opinion, political line of the party was increasingly shifted towards radical antagonism. Consequently, he joined the Alliance for Italy of Francesco Rutelli.[1]

In 2013 he was re-elected Deputy with the Democratic Centre, becoming president of the Mixed Group of the Chamber of Deputies. On 26 June 2014 he left the Democratic Centre, following the disappointing result in the European elections of the same year.[2]

References

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