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Trentino Civic List Civica Trentina | |
---|---|
President | Rodolfo Borga |
Founded | 2013 |
Dissolved | 2019 |
Split from | The People of Freedom |
Succeeded by | The Civic List |
Ideology |
Christian democracy
[1] Conservatism [1] |
Trentino Civic List ( Italian: Civica Trentina, CT) is a Christian-democratic political party active in Trentino. [1]
The party was formed in July 2013 by Rodolfo Borga, [2] formerly the leader of The People of Freedom in the Provincial Council. [3] [4] In the 2013 provincial election the party supported Diego Mosna for President, in alliance with Trentino Project, and obtained 3.7% of the vote; [5] Borga was re-elected to the Provincial Council. [6]
In 2014 the CT was joined by two more councillors: Claudio Cia, who replaced Mosna, and Claudio Civettini, a splinter from Lega Nord Trentino (LNT). [7] [8] [9] [10] In the 2015 municipal election in Trento the party joined forces with the LNT, Trentino Project, Forza Italia and the Brothers of Italy: Cia, who ran for mayor, won 31.0% of the vote (and was defeated by the outgoing Democratic mayor Alessandro Andreatta), while the party's list obtained 7.1%. [11] [12]
As of May 2015, the CT seemed headed toward an alliance with the Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party, instead that its 2015 centre-right allies. This led Cia to leave the party [13] [14] and launch the alternative Act for Trentino, [15] which soon joined forces with the LNT and the other parties of the centre-right.
However, in the 2018 provincial election the CT was actually part of the autonomist centre-right coalition. Maurizio Fugatti of the LNT was elected President of Trentino and the CT, with its 4.6%, was the coalition's second largest party. After Borga's death in January 2019, Mattia Gottardi was appointed provincial minister by Fugatti. [16] Later, Gottardi and the provincial councilor Vanessa Masé declared the experience of the Trentino Civic List closed, founding a new party called The Civic List. [17] The decision to close the party was contested by Antonio Coradello, city councilor in Trento, who declared that the Trentino Civic List was still active. [18] [19]
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Trentino Civic List Civica Trentina | |
---|---|
President | Rodolfo Borga |
Founded | 2013 |
Dissolved | 2019 |
Split from | The People of Freedom |
Succeeded by | The Civic List |
Ideology |
Christian democracy
[1] Conservatism [1] |
Trentino Civic List ( Italian: Civica Trentina, CT) is a Christian-democratic political party active in Trentino. [1]
The party was formed in July 2013 by Rodolfo Borga, [2] formerly the leader of The People of Freedom in the Provincial Council. [3] [4] In the 2013 provincial election the party supported Diego Mosna for President, in alliance with Trentino Project, and obtained 3.7% of the vote; [5] Borga was re-elected to the Provincial Council. [6]
In 2014 the CT was joined by two more councillors: Claudio Cia, who replaced Mosna, and Claudio Civettini, a splinter from Lega Nord Trentino (LNT). [7] [8] [9] [10] In the 2015 municipal election in Trento the party joined forces with the LNT, Trentino Project, Forza Italia and the Brothers of Italy: Cia, who ran for mayor, won 31.0% of the vote (and was defeated by the outgoing Democratic mayor Alessandro Andreatta), while the party's list obtained 7.1%. [11] [12]
As of May 2015, the CT seemed headed toward an alliance with the Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party, instead that its 2015 centre-right allies. This led Cia to leave the party [13] [14] and launch the alternative Act for Trentino, [15] which soon joined forces with the LNT and the other parties of the centre-right.
However, in the 2018 provincial election the CT was actually part of the autonomist centre-right coalition. Maurizio Fugatti of the LNT was elected President of Trentino and the CT, with its 4.6%, was the coalition's second largest party. After Borga's death in January 2019, Mattia Gottardi was appointed provincial minister by Fugatti. [16] Later, Gottardi and the provincial councilor Vanessa Masé declared the experience of the Trentino Civic List closed, founding a new party called The Civic List. [17] The decision to close the party was contested by Antonio Coradello, city councilor in Trento, who declared that the Trentino Civic List was still active. [18] [19]