Roberto Speranza

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Roberto Speranza
Chamber of Deputies
Assumed office
15 March 2013
ConstituencyBasilicata (2013–2018)
Tuscany (2018–2022)
Campania 1 (since 2022)
Personal details
Born (1979-01-04) 4 January 1979 (age 45)
Potenza, Italy
Political partyDemocratic Party
(2007–2017; since 2023)
Other political
affiliations
DS (2005–2007)
Art.1 (2017–2023)
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Spouse
Rosangela Cossidente
(m. 2015)
Children2
Alma materLuiss Guido Carli

Roberto Speranza (born 4 January 1979) is an Italian politician of the

government of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and was later confirmed by Prime Minister Mario Draghi.[2] During his tenure, he had to face the COVID-19 pandemic, which deeply affected Italy.[3]

Early life and education

Roberto Speranza was born in

2000s, he graduated in political science at the Luiss Guido Carli of Rome.[4]

Political career

Early political career

In 2005 Speranza was elected to the national executive of the

In February 2008 Speranza was appointed by PD's secretary Walter Veltroni to the national committee of Young Democrats, with the task of creating the new youth organization of the Democratic Party.[8] On 9 November 2009 he was elected regional secretary of the PD for Basilicata.[citation needed]

Speranza with Luigi Zanda and Lorenzo Guerini at the Quirinal Palace

After supporting

Senate, no political group or party won an outright majority, resulting in a hung parliament.[10][11] Speranza was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in Basilicata's electoral constituency.[12]

On 19 March 2013 Speranza was elected leader of the PD in the Chamber of Deputies.[13] Speranza obtained 200 votes among the democratic deputies, the nil have been about thirty and the white ones 53. He later announced his resignation on 15 April 2015, in disagreement with PD's new leader and Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, after government's decision to put approve with a confidence vote the new electoral law, the so-called Italicum.[14]

Article One's leader

On 20 February 2017 he left the Democratic Party along with other representatives, including former secretary Pier Luigi Bersani, due to a heated debate with the pro-Renzi majority. Five days later, together with Arturo Scotto, Enrico Rossi, Vasco Errani and Pier Luigi Bersani, he created a new party called Article One – Democratic and Progressive Movement, made up of parliamentarians who had exited from the Democratic Party and the Italian Left (SI).[15] In April 2017 he became national coordinator of Article One – MDP.[16][17]

In the run-up of the

President of the Senate and former anti-mafia magistrate.[18] In the election, LeU obtained only 3.4% of votes, but Speranza succeeding in being re-elected deputy in the Tuscany constituency. On 6 April 2019 Speranza was elected Secretary of Article One.[19][20]

Minister of Health

In August 2019 tensions grew within the

Minister of Health.[26][27] He was labeled as the most left-leaning Health Minister in Italian history.[28]

COVID-19 pandemic

In February 2020, Italy became one of the world's main centres for confirmed cases of

COVID-19, a respiratory disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus that originated in China.[29] As of January 2021, more than 2,250,000 coronavirus cases and 78,000 deaths were confirmed, affecting mainly Lombardy, Emilia-Romagna, Veneto and Piedmont.[30]

In late January, the government banned all flights from and to China, becoming the first European country to adopt this measure.

Council of Ministers announced a bill to contain the COVID-19 outbreak, quarantining more than 50,000 people from 11 different municipalities in Northern Italy. Prime Minister Conte stated: "In the outbreak areas, entry and exit will not be provided. Suspension of work activities and sport events has already been ordered in those areas."[32]

Schools were closed in 10 municipalities in Lombardy, one in Veneto and in Emilia-Romagna. In some areas, all public events were cancelled and commercial activities were halted.[33] Regional train services suspended the stops in the most affected areas – with trains not stopping at Codogno, Maleo and Casalpusterlengo stations.[34][35] Universities in Lombardy suspended all activities from 23 February.[36][37] After few days, schools and universities closed in the whole country.[38]

On 24 February, Speranza appointed Walter Ricciardi, a member of World Health Organization's executive committee and former president of Italian National Institute of Health, as a special adviser for relations between Italy and international health organisations.[39]

On 8 March 2020, Prime Minister Conte extended the quarantine to all of

putting more than a quarter of the national population under lockdown.[40] On the following day, he announced in a press conference that all measures previously applied only in the so-called "red zones" had been extended to the whole country, putting de facto 60 million people in lockdown. He later proceeded to officially sign the executive decree.[41][42] This measure was described as the largest lockdown in human history.[43][44][45][46]

On 20 March, Minister Speranza ordered tighter regulations on free movement. The new measures banned open-air sports and running, except individually and in close proximity of one's residence. Parks, playgrounds and public green were closed down. Furthermore, movement across the country was further restricted, by banning "any movement towards a residence different from the main one", including holiday homes, during weekends and holidays.[47] While on the following day, Conte announced further restrictions within the nationwide lockdown, by halting all non-essential production, industries and businesses in Italy,[48] following the rise in the number of new cases and deaths in the previous days.[49][50]

Speranza and Conte during the crisis

On 24 March, in a live-streamed press conference, Prime Minister Conte announced a new decree approved by the Council of Ministers. The decree imposed higher fines for the violation of the restrictive measures, and a regulation of the relationship between government and Parliament during the emergency. It included also the possibility of reducing or suspending public and private transport, and gave the regional governments power to impose additional restrictive regulations in their Regions for a maximum of seven days before being confirmed by national decree.[51][52]

On 1 April, the government extended the period of lockdown until 13 April.

bookstores and silviculture activities, to reopen under specific safe measures.[55]

On 26 April, Conte and Speranza announced the so-called "Phase 2", that would start from May 4. Movements across regions were still forbidden, while the ones between municipalities and provinces were allowed only for work and health reasons as well as for visit relatives.[56] Moreover, he allowed the re-opening of closed factories, but schools, bars, restaurants and barbers were still closed.[57] On 18 May, the lockdown officially ended and the government allowed the re-openings of bars, restaurants, barbers and gyms. However, travels across regions were still limited.[58]

On 1 June, the Ministry of Health launched the Immuni App ("Immune App"),[59] a contact-tracing app, designed to help Italy manage the so-called "Phase 2" of the coronavirus crisis.[60] The app aimed to notify users at risk of carrying the virus as early as possible, even when they were asymptomatic. These users can then self-isolate to avoid infecting others.[61] Despite harsh criticism from the opposition, which accused the government of establishing an Orwell-like Big Brother,[62] in the first two days the app was downloaded by more than a million people.[63]

On 16 August, after an increasing in the daily number of cases, Minister Speranza closed all the

night clubs of the country and imposed to wear a mask outdoors in some areas, considered at risk of crowding.[64]

Personal life

Since 2015, Speranza has been married with Rosangela Cossidente, with whom he has two children, Michele Simon and Emma Iris.[65] He is a fervent supporter of AS Roma.[66]

Electoral history

Election House Constituency Party Votes Result
2013 Chamber of Deputies Basilicata PD [a] checkY Elected
2018 Chamber of Deputies Tuscany LeU [a] checkY Elected
2022 Chamber of Deputies Campania 1 PD–IDP [a] checkY Elected
  1. ^ a b c Elected in a closed list proportional representation system.

References

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  65. ^ Minoranza dem a nozze
  66. ^ Sito Ufficiale di Roberto Speranza
Political offices
Preceded by
Italian Minister of Health

2019–2022
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New party Secretary of Article One
2019–2023
Party dissolved