Schittulli Political Movement
Schittulli Political Movement (Italian: Movimento Politico Schittulli) is a political party in Italy active in Apulia, founded in 2009 by the surgeon Francesco Schittulli.
History
The party was launched in 2009 as electoral list for the candidacy of Francesco Schittulli to the presidency of the province of Bari. Schittulli, supported by the centre-right coalition, won the electoral competition with 50.05% of the vote, while the Schittulli Movement obtained 9.5% of the vote and 5 provincial councillors.[1]
In 2010 Schittulli organized his list into a full-fledged party.[2]
Schittulli was a candidate for president in the 2015 Apulian regional election, but after the political breaking between Raffaele Fitto and Silvio Berlusconi he was supported by only a part of the centre-right coalition (Schittulli Political Movement, Popular Area, Over with Fitto and Brothers of Italy), while Forza Italia supported the candidacy of Adriana Poli Bortone.[3] Finally, Schittulli finished third, behind Michele Emiliano (Democratic Party) and Antonella Laricchia (Five Star Movement), but surpassing the other centre-right candidate, Adriana Poli Bortone.[4] Schittulli obtained 18.29% of the vote, while his movement (in a single list with Popular Area) obtained 6.36% of the vote and 4 seats in the regional council.
In 2021 the Schittulli Movement enters into a political agreement with Us with Italy, with the prospect of presenting joint lists in local elections.[5]
References
- ^ Schittulli batte Divella al primo turno È il nuovo presidente della Provincia
- ^ La sfida di Schittulli: nuovo movimento «Nel centrodestra ma rapporti con tutti»
- ^ Regionali Puglia, Berlusconi conferma la Poli Bortone: sarà la candidata di FI
- ^ Regionali Puglia, tutti sconfitti nel derby di centrodestra. Fitto non cancella Forza Italia
- ^ https://radionorba.it/puglia-il-centrodestra-si-rinforza/ Incontro tra il prof. Francesco Schittulli e l’ex ministro Maurizio Lupi
- v
- t
- e
- Brothers of Italy (117)
- Democratic Party (71) (incl. DemoS and CD)
- Lega (66)
- Five Star Movement (50)
- Forza Italia (46) (incl. NPSI)
- Action (12)
- Italia Viva (8)
- Greens and Left Alliance
- Green Europe [5]
- Italian Left [4]
- Progressive Party [1]
- Us Moderates (5)
- South Tyrolean People's Party (3)
- More Europe (2) (incl. RI)
- Animalist Movement (1)
- Associative Movement of Italians Abroad (1)
- Coraggio Italia (1)
- South calls North (1)
- Union of the Centre (1)
- Valdostan Union (1)
- Brothers of Italy (66)
- Democratic Party (37)
- Lega (29) (incl. Fassa)
- Five Star Movement (26)
- Forza Italia (20)
- Italia Viva (7)
- Action (4)
- Greens and Left Alliance
- Italian Left [2]
- Green Europe [1]
- Us Moderates
- Union of the Centre [1]
- South Tyrolean People's Party (2)
- Associative Movement of Italians Abroad (1)
- Campobase (1)
- Coraggio Italia (1)
- Brothers of Italy (24)
- Democratic Party (21)
- Five Star Movement (8)
- Forza Italia (8)
- Lega (8)
- Greens and Left Alliance (6)
- South Tyrolean People's Party (1)
- Aosta Valley
- Civic Network
- Edelweiss
- For Our Valley
- For Autonomy
- Mouv'
- Valdostan Alliance
- Piedmont
- Moderates
- Lombardy
- Renaissance
- Trentino
- South Tyrol
- Team K
- Greens
- Die Freiheitlichen
- For South Tyrol with Widmann
- JWA List
- South Tyrolean Freedom
- La Civica
- Vita
- Veneto
- Friuli-Venezia Giulia
- Abruzzo
- Molise
- Campania
- Italy Is Popular
- Italian Socialist Party
- Us of the Centre
- Apulia
- Basilicata
- Sicily
- Sardinia
- Historical Italian political parties
- 19th-century Italian political groups
- Early 20th-century Italian political parties
- 1950s–1990s Italian political parties
This article about a political party in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e