Alessandra Mussolini

Italian politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroItalian politician
A.K.A.Alexandra Mussolini
A.K.A.Alexandra Mussolini
PlacesItaly
isActor Politician Model Film actor Musician
Work fieldFashion Film, TV, Stage & Radio Music Politics
Gender
Female
Religion:Catholicism
Birth30 December 1962, Rome
Age62 years
ResidenceNaples
Politics:Italian Social Movement National Alliance Social Action Forza Italia
Family
Mother:Anna Maria Villani Scicolone
Father:Romano Mussolini
The details

Biography

Alessandra Mussolini (born 30 December 1962) is an Italian conservative politician, the granddaughter of Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, and a former actress and model who served as a Member of the European Parliament for Forza Italia. She was a member of the Chamber of Deputies from 2008 to 2013 and the Italian Senate from 2013 to 2014, she was elected under The People of Freedom which is now part of Forza Italia. She was elected to the European Parliament in 2014.

She was the founder and leader of the national conservative political party Social Action; from 2004 until 2008, Mussolini also served as a Member of the European Parliament, and she has been a member of the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of the Italian Parliament, for The People of Freedom.

Personal life

Alessandra Mussolini was born in Rome, the daughter of Romano Mussolini, the fourth son of Benito Mussolini, Fascist dictator of Italy from 1922 to 1943, and Anna Maria Villani Scicolone (born 11 May 1938, Rome). The actress Sophia Loren is her maternal aunt.

From 1976 to 1980 she went to high school at the American Overseas School of Rome. She graduated in 1994 from Sapienza University of Rome, where she got her master of science in medicine and surgery.

She married customs policeman Mauro Floriani on 28 October 1989. Going against tradition, she proposed to him. Together they have three children, Caterina, Clarissa, and Romano – the last named after his grandfather. Later, the children adopted their mother's surname, but she went through a complex legal process to allow them to do so. She has since campaigned for Italian law to be changed to allow all children to take their mother's last name if they wish.

Her husband was scheduled to appear at court for a child prostitution trial in 2015. In 2013, around 50 men — among them professionals, priests, and politicians — were accused of paying two teenage girls, aged 14 and 15, for sexual services in Rome.

Entertainment career

Mussolini was taken under the wing of her aunt Sophia Loren for a while and started a career as an actress in the Italian language film industry during the 1970s. A Special Day (1977), in which she had a minor role as "Maria Luisa," won an American Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

During 1982, Mussolini released a pop music album of romantic songs under the title Amore on Alfa Records; the album was released only in Japan and has since become something of a collectors item.

Mussolini also appeared as a glamour model, including on the cover of two European editions of Playboy, in Italy (August 1983) and Germany (November 1983). "When you are an actress, you are dealing with the body. Every actress does topless and stuff like this; you have to," she has said.

Mussolini continued as an actress into the 1980s. Some of the films she featured in were made for Italian television. However, she still acted in standard cinematic films, such as The Assisi Underground in which she played a nun; the movie focused on the Roman Catholic Church rescuing Italian Jews from the Nazis in 1943. She starred in her final film in 1990 and then left the film industry to continue studying after a producer asked her to change her name.

Political career

In 1992, she was elected to parliament in a Naples constituency as a member of the Movimento Sociale Italiano (MSI).

She later was a candidate for the post of mayor of Naples, but was defeated by Antonio Bassolino. Her relations with Gianfranco Fini, leader of the Alleanza Nazionale, never were very good, she announced; she then later withdrew, resigning over differences with him at least once. She unsuccessfully challenged him for leadership of the party when he withdrew support for Benito Mussolini in a television interview in January 2002.

In 2001, Mussolini was involved in an physical altercation while filming for a Porta a Porta talk show episode on sexual harassment. Mussolini attacked and kicked Katia Bellillo, then Minister for Equal Opportunities, while calling her an "ugly communist" who should "go and live in Cuba."

Mussolini suddenly left National Alliance on 28 November 2003, following the visit of party leader and the Deputy Prime Minister Gianfranco Fini to Israel, where he described fascism as part "the absolute evil" with regard to the Holocaust as he apologised for Italy's role as an Axis Power during the Second World War. Mussolini, however, defended the right of Israel to exist and declared that the world "should beg forgiveness of Israel."

Following her resignation, Mussolini formed her Social Action party, originally named "Freedom of Action," and organised a coalition named Social Alternative. The move was read in the Italian media as surprising because of Mussolini's "progressive" stances on many issues, including abortion, artificial insemination, gay rights and civil unions. She has been an outspoken feminist and has been described by conservative commentators as a "socialist" and a "left-winger."

In the 2004 European Parliament election her electoral list, Social Alternative, gained 1.2% of the vote. Mussolini herself received 133,000 preference votes.

In response to a comment made by UKIP MEP Godfrey Bloom in which he said that "No self-respecting small businessman with a brain in the right place would ever employ a lady of child-bearing age. That isn't politically correct, is it, but it's a fact of life. The more women's rights you have, it's actually a bar to their employment." and: "I just don't think [women] clean behind the fridge enough," Mussolini responded by saying

I know the English have a sense of humour about themselves, but I am from Naples and I can say that we women do know how to cook and clean the refrigerator and even be politicians, while perhaps Godfrey Bloom does not know either how to clean the refrigerator or how to be a politician.

In March 2005, Mussolini was banned by a local court from regional elections held the following month for presenting fraudulent signatures. "This is an affront to democracy, if they're going to exclude the Social Alternative they will have to exclude all the parties, because all the signature lists are false," Mussolini told Reuters. Mussolini went on a hunger strike to protest the decision. However, at the end of the month Italy's top administrative court, the Council of State, annulled the decision and she stood for election.

In 2006 she responded to claims by the transgender Italian M.P. candidate Vladimir Luxuria that she was a 'fascist' with the line "Meglio fascista che frocio" ("Better fascist than faggot").

In November 2007, remarks by Mussolini triggered the collapse of the far-right Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty grouping within the European Parliament. Mussolini declared that all Romanians were criminals in remarks regarding immigration policy. This prompted delegates from the Greater Romania Party to quit the group, bringing the group below the minimum number of members to qualify as a caucus and receive Parliamentary funding.

After the Italian general elections of April 2008, Mussolini served as a member of the Italian parliament within Silvio Berlusconi's alliance of right wing parties, The People of Freedom.

Mussolini condemned the Vatican's comparison of homosexuality with pedophilia, stating "You can't link sexual orientation to pedophilia … this link risks becoming dangerously misleading for the protection of children."

In the Italian general election in February 2013, she was elected to the Senate of the Republic (Italy) for The People of Freedom. The party was transformed into a new Forza Italia in November 2013.

In the 2014 European Parliament election, Mussolini was elected to the EP for Forza Italia.

She left Forza Italia in 2018 following the party's decision to be in opposition to the Conte government.

On March 31, 2019, Canadian actor and cartoonist Jim Carrey posted on Twitter a drawing depicting the famous 1945 scene of Benito Mussolini hanging upside down from the roof of a gas station alongside his mistress Clara Petacci after their execution, with captions "If you’re wondering what fascism leads to, just ask Benito Mussolini and his mistress Claretta." In response, Mussolini replied to Carrey on Twitter, tweeting "You are a bastard." In a subsequent series of tweets and replies, Mussolini called Carrey's artworks "dirty paper," posted insults in both English and Italian including "piece of human garbage" and "What about your piggy family?" against Twitter users criticizing her, tweeting pictures suggesting Carrey to draw Rosa Parks, Native Americans and atomic bombings, before concluding with denouncing her critics as "antifa." Jim Carrey did not respond to any of Mussolini's posts.

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1972Bianco, rosso e...Sister Germana as a Child
1977A Special DayMaria Luisa Taberi
1982Il Caso Pupetta MarescaPupetta MarescaTV movie, with Alessandra Mussolini as Pupetta Maresca
1983Il TassinaroDonatella
1984Qualcosa di biondoBrideTV movie, Uncredited
1985The Assisi UndergroundSister Beata
1986Ferragosto O.K.FotomodellaTV movie
1987Noi uomini duriAda
1988Vincere per vincereFiammaTV movie
1990Sabato, domenica e lunedìGiulianellaTV movie
1990Ha-Derech L'Ein HarodLiora(final film role)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 23 Aug 2019. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.