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Enrico Ferri (politician)

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Enrico Ferri
Minister of Public Works
In office
13 April 1988 – 22 July 1989
Prime MinisterCiriaco De Mita
Preceded byEmilio De Rose
Succeeded byGiovanni Prandini
Secretary of the Italian Democratic Socialist Party
In office
30 April 1993 – 29 January 1995
Preceded byCarlo Vizzini
Succeeded byGian Franco Schietroma
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
23 April 1992 – 14 April 1994
Personal details
Born(1942-02-17)17 February 1942
La Spezia, Italy
Died17 December 2020(2020-12-17) (aged 78)
Pontremoli, Italy
Political partyPSDI (1987–1995)
SOLE (1995–1996)
CCD (1996–1998)
UDR (1998–1999)
FI (1999–2006)
UDEUR (2006–2013)
Children4
Alma materUniversity of Florence
ProfessionPolitician, magistrate

Enrico Ferri (17 February 1942 – 17 December 2020) was an Italian politician and magistrate.

Biography

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Graduated in law at the University of Florence in 1966, Ferri has been a magistrate since 1970 and since 1971 a praetor in Pontremoli. He was a member of the Superior Council of the Judiciary from 1976 to 1981, when he became National Secretary of the Independent Judiciary (1981−1987).

From 1988 to 1989 he served as Minister of Public Works in the De Mita Cabinet and is known for having set the limit of 110 km/h on the highway.[1] In 1989 he was elected MEP for the PSDI and in 1992 he was elected Deputy in the National Parliament. In 1990 he was also elected Mayor of Pontremoli (he held office until 2004). On 30 April 1993 he was appointed Secretary of the PSDI.[2] In 1994 he was newly elected MEP for his party. In 1995 he was also re-elected Mayor of Pontremoli, with the support of Forza Italia and National Alliance. This led to further fractures within the party and the official expulsion by the Socialist International and the Party of European Socialists, to which the PSDI and Ferri adhered. Ferri was thus forced to leave the party secretariat. On 10 December 1994, together with Luigi Preti, he founded the European Liberal Social Democracy (SOLE). In January 1995 a PSDI congress definitively put the current of Ferri and Preti into the minority, appointing Gian Franco Schietroma as party secretary. In 1995 the SOLE movement became an autonomous party and approached the centre-right area, forging a privileged collaboration with the Christian Democratic Centre. Luigi Preti, not in favor of this choice, detached himself from the SOLE by creating the Movement for the Social Democratic Rebirth, a political subject federated with Forza Italia.

At the 1996 general elections, Ferri was a candidate on the White Flower lists, without however being elected. In 1998 Ferri left the CCD (of which he became vice president in 1997–1998) and followed Clemente Mastella into the Democratic Union for the Republic (UDR) of Francesco Cossiga. However he soon left the party to join Forza Italia in 1999, resuming relations with Luigi Preti. In the 1999 European Parliament elections he ran with Forza Italia and was elected MEP, where he remained until 2004.

On the occasion of the 2006 general elections, he returned to the centre-left area, joining the Union of Democrats for Europe of Clemente Mastella, but he was not elected. So he returned to the judiciary as Deputy Prosecutor General of the Cassation. With the appointment of Mastella as Minister of Justice, he was appointed head of the International Activities Coordination Office (UCAI) at the same Ministry of Justice, a position he held until the fall of the Prodi government in January 2008.

Personal life

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Enrico Ferri was the father of four children. The eldest son, Filippo, was head of the Florence Police mobile team, before being definitively sentenced to three years and eight months for the violence in the Diaz school in 2001 during the G8 in Genoa; the second son, Jacopo, has been a regional councillor in Tuscany for Forza Italia; the third son, Cosimo Maria Ferri, is a former Undersecretary and a parliamentary Deputy for the Democratic Party; the daughter, Camilla, works as a pharmacist at the San Raffaele Hospital in Milan.

Ferri died on 17 December 2020 after a long illness.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "Morto Enrico Ferri, il ministro dei "110 all'ora"" (in Italian). RAI News.
  2. ^ "L' EX MINISTRO ENRICO FERRI E' IL NUOVO SEGRETARIO DEL PSDI - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian). 1 May 1993. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Addio all'ex ministro Enrico Ferri, fissò il limite dei 110 km all'ora in autostrada". Il Terreno. 17 December 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
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Preceded by Secretary of the Italian Democratic Socialist Party
1993–1995
Succeeded by