Patrizia Barbieri
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at [[:it:Patrizia Barbieri]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|it|Patrizia Barbieri}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Patrizia Barbieri | |
---|---|
Mayor of Piacenza | |
In office 25 June 2017 – 26 June 2022 | |
Preceded by | Paolo Dosi |
Succeeded by | Katia Tarasconi |
President of the Province of Piacenza | |
In office 31 October 2018 – 29 June 2022 | |
Preceded by | Francesco Rolleri |
Succeeded by | Franco Albertini |
Personal details | |
Born | (1960-05-08) 8 May 1960 (age 64) Cremona, Lombardy, Italy |
Political party | Independent (Centre-Right) |
Alma mater | University of Parma |
Occupation | lawyer |
Website | patriziabarbieri.com |
Patrizia Barbieri (born 8 May 1960) is an Italian politician.[1]
Biography
Barbieri was born in Cremona, Italy, and she graduated in law at University of Parma. She has a law firm together with some partners in Piacenza, where she works as a civil lawyer and as a freelancer. She resides in Castelvetro Piacentino, a little town where she was Mayor from 20 November 1994 to 26 May 2003 (two consecutive terms).[2] She is married and has two daughters.[3] On 4 March 2020 Barbieri announced she had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2.[4] Supported by Lega Nord, Forza Italia, Brothers of Italy and Lista civica, she won the 2017 Piacenza mayoral election and then officially took office on 28 June 2017[5] as Mayor of Piacenza for a first five-year term (renewable once).[6][7] Through second degree elections[8] – i.e. through indirect elections reserved for local administrators (Mayors and Councilors of Municipalities of the territory)[8] – on 31 October 2018 was elected – maintaining simultaneously her role as Mayor, as required by Delrio Law[9] – also President of the Province of Piacenza for a first four-year term (renewable once).[10] She decided on 16 February 2022[11] to run (supported again by Lega Nord, Forza Italia, Brothers of Italy and Lista civica) for a second, and last, five-year term as Mayor of Piacenza in the 2022 election: Barbieri lost re-election on 26 June with 46.54% of votes against Katia Tarasconi (PD) in the run-off[12] and she officially left office on 29 June: as established by the Delrio Law, with the loss of the role of Mayor Barbieri lost also the Presidency of the Province which is held ad interim by the Vicepresident Franco Albertini[13] pending the regular election[14] at the expiry of the mandate,[15] scheduled for September.[16]
References
- ^ "Patrizia Barbieri tra le candidate al Premio per il miglior sindaco del mondo" (in Italian). ilpiacenza.it. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ "Patrizia Barbieri: a Piacenza c'è un sindaco in trincea" (in Italian). ilmiogiornale.net. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ "Patrizia Barbieri". Il Sole 24 Ore (in Italian). Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ "Coronavirus, anche il sindaco e presidente della Provincia Barbieri è stata contagiata". Il Piacenza (in Italian). 4 March 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- ^ "Il sindaco Patrizia Barbieri" (in Italian). comune.piacenza.it. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ "Patrizia Barbieri: ecco le sfide del nuovo sindaco di Piacenza" (in Italian). ilmiogiornale.net. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ "Io, Patrizia". Secolo d'Italia (in Italian). Archived from the original on 29 June 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ a b "Provincia di Piacenza".
- ^ Legge Del Rio (legge 7 aprile 2014 n. 56) written by Graziano Delrio (at that time Italian Minister of Regional Affairs and Autonomies) during Letta Cabinet and approved by Italian Parliament during Renzi Cabinet
- ^ "Patrizia Barbieri prima donna presidente della Provincia". Piacenza24. 31 October 2018. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "Barbieri si ricandida a sindaco: "Sciolgo le riserve, il mio partito è Piacenza" – Libertà Piacenza".
- ^ "Katia Tarasconi è il nuovo sindaco di Piacenza: "Sono onorata" – Libertà Piacenza".
- ^ "Tarasconi nuovo sindaco, cambio alla guida della Provincia: Franco Al…".
- ^ "Provincia, elezioni in autunno. Albertini svolgerà le funzioni del presidente – Libertà Piacenza".
- ^ "PC: Franco Albertini svolgerà le funzioni di presidente fino alla fin…".
- ^ "Cambio anche in Provincia, entro la fine di settembre elezione del nu…".
External links
- Patrizia Barbieri – Official site
- Municipality of Piacenza – official card of the Mayor
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Mayor of Piacenza 2017–2022 | Succeeded by |
Preceded by Francesco Rolleri | President of the Province of Piacenza 2018–2022 | Succeeded by Franco Albertini |
- v
- t
- e
- Agrigento
- Francesco Miccichè (centre-right)
- Alessandria
- Giorgio Abonante (PD)
- Ancona
- Daniele Silvetti (FI)
- Andria
- Giovanna Bruno ([[]])
- Arezzo
- Alessandro Ghinelli (centre-right)
- Ascoli Piceno
- Marco Fioravanti (FdI)
- Asti
- Maurizio Rasero (FI)
- Avellino
- Gianluca Festa (I)
- Barletta
- Cosimo Cannito (centre-right)
- Belluno
- Oscar De Pellegrin (centre-right)
- Benevento
- Clemente Mastella (NC)
- Bergamo
- Giorgio Gori (PD)
- Biella
- Claudio Corradino (LN)
- Bolzano
- Renzo Caramaschi (PD)
- Brescia
- Laura Castelletti (centre-left)
- Brindisi
- Giuseppe Marchionna (centre-right)
- Caltanissetta
- Roberto Gambino (M5S)
- Campobasso
- Roberto Gravina (M5S)
- Carbonia
- Pietro Morittu (PD)
- Caserta
- Carlo Marino (PD)
- Catanzaro
- Nicola Fiorita (centre-left)
- Chieti
- Diego Ferrara (PD)
- Como
- Alessandro Rapinese (I)
- Cosenza
- Franz Caruso (PSI)
- Cremona
- Gianluca Galimberti (PD)
- Crotone
- Vincenzo Voce (I)
- Cuneo
- Patrizia Manassero (PD)
- Enna
- Maurizio Dipietro (IV)
- Fermo
- Paolo Calcinaro (I)
- Ferrara
- Alan Fabbri (LN)
- Foggia
- Maria Aida Episcopo (centre-left)
- Forlì
- Gian Luca Zattini (LN)
- Frosinone
- Riccardo Mastrangeli (FI)
- Gorizia
- Rodolfo Ziberna (FI)
- Grosseto
- Antonfrancesco Vivarelli Colonna (centre-right)
- Imperia
- Claudio Scajola (centre-right)
- Isernia
- Piero Castrataro (centre-left)
- La Spezia
- Pierluigi Peracchini (CI)
- L'Aquila
- Pierluigi Biondi (FdI)
- Latina
- Matilde Celentano (FdI)
- Lecce
- Carlo Salvemini (centre-left)
- Lecco
- Mauro Gattinoni (centre-left)
- Livorno
- Luca Salvetti (centre-left)
- Lodi
- Andrea Furegato (PD)
- Lucca
- Mario Pardini (centre-right)
- Macerata
- Sandro Parcaroli (LN)
- Mantua
- Mattia Palazzi (PD)
- Massa
- Francesco Persiani (LN)
- Matera
- Domenico Bennardi (M5S)
- Modena
- Gian Carlo Muzzarelli (PD)
- Monza
- Paolo Pilotto (PD)
- Novara
- Alessandro Canelli (LN)
- Nuoro
- Andrea Soddu (I)
- Oristano
- Massimiliano Sanna (RS)
- Padua
- Sergio Giordani (centre-left)
- Parma
- Michele Guerra (IC)
- Pavia
- Fabrizio Fracassi (LN)
- Perugia
- Andrea Romizi (FI)
- Pesaro
- Matteo Ricci (PD)
- Pescara
- Carlo Masci (FI)
- Piacenza
- Katia Tarasconi (PD)
- Pisa
- Michele Conti (LN)
- Pistoia
- Alessandro Tomasi (FdI)
- Pordenone
- Alessandro Ciriani (centre-right)
- Potenza
- Mario Guarente (LN)
- Prato
- Matteo Biffoni (PD)
- Ragusa
- Giuseppe Cassì (I)
- Ravenna
- Michele De Pascale (PD)
- Reggio Emilia
- Luca Vecchi (PD)
- Rieti
- Daniele Sinibaldi (FdI)
- Rimini
- Jamil Sadegholvaad (PD)
- Rovigo
- Edoardo Gaffeo (centre-left)
- Salerno
- Vincenzo Napoli (PD)
- Sassari
- Nanni Campus (I)
- Savona
- Marco Russo (PD)
- Siena
- Nicoletta Fabio (centre-right)
- Sondrio
- Marco Scaramellini (LN)
- Syracuse
- Francesco Italia (Az)
- Taranto
- Rinaldo Melucci (PD)
- Teramo
- Gianguido D'Alberto (centre-left)
- Terni
- Stefano Bandecchi (AP)
- Trani
- Amedeo Bottaro (PD)
- Trapani
- Giacomo Tranchida (PD)
- Trento
- Franco Ianeselli (centre-left)
- Treviso
- Mario Conte (LN)
- Trieste
- Roberto Dipiazza (FI)
- Udine
- Alberto Felice De Toni (centre-left)
- Varese
- Davide Galimberti (PD)
- Verbania
- Silvia Marchionini (PD)
- Vercelli
- Andrea Corsaro (FI)
- Verona
- Damiano Tommasi (centre-left)
- Vibo Valentia
- Maria Limardo (centre-right)
- Vicenza
- Giacomo Possamai (PD)
- Viterbo
- Chiara Frontini (I)
This article about a mayor in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e