Basilio Giordano | |
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Italian Senator for North America and Central America | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 2008 |
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Preceded by | Renato Turano |
Saint-Leonard City Councillor, Ward Eight | |
In office 1982–1990 |
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Preceded by | Rosario Ortona |
Succeeded by | Vincenzo Arciresi |
Personal details | |
Political party | The People of Freedom |
Basilio Giordano (born February 3, 1952) is an Italian and Canadian politician and journalist. He was a councillor in the Montreal suburb of Saint-Leonard from 1982 to 1990 and has served in the Italian Senate since 2008, representing Italian voters in North and Central America as a member of Silvio Berlusconi's People of Freedom party.
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Giordano was born in Frascineto, Calabria. While living in Italy, he studied languages and literature at the Sapienza University of Rome and worked in the Vatican's Congregazione di Propaganda Fide. After moving to North America in 1975, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in languages from the Université de Montréal (1980). Giordano's biography indicates that he is fluent in Italian, English, French, and Spanish.[1]
Giordano was a political aide to Saint-Leonard mayor Michel Bissonnet from 1978 to 1980 and continued to work for Bissonnet after the latter's election to the National Assembly of Quebec in the 1981.[2]
Giordano was elected to the Saint-Leonard city council in 1982 as a member of mayor Antonio di Ciocco's Équipe du renouveau de la cité de Saint-Léonard. This party dissolved after di Ciocco's death in 1984, and Giordano became a founding member of the successor Ralliement de Saint-Léonard (RdSL) party led by new mayor Raymond Renaud.[3] He was re-elected under the new party's banner in 1986. After an internal party crisis in 1988, he was one of only two councillors to remain aligned with Renaud; the other eight RdSL representatives resigned to sit as independents.[4]
Giordano become the editor of Il Cittadino Canadese, a community journal for Montreal's Italian community, in 1986.
In 1997, Il Cittadino Canadese accused Carlo Selvaggi, the Italian consul-general in Montreal, of threatening to end the Italian government's financial support for the paper. Il Cittadino Canadese had previously featured an article that accused the consulate of inaccessibility and inefficiency. Selvaggi subsequently met Giordano for a private conversation about the article, and Giordano recorded their conversation. At one stage, Selvaggi said, "If you wish to continue receiving a financial grant, you must stop publishing articles against the consulate." This was perceived by some as a threat, though Selvaggi later denied this and clarified that only the Italian government could make a decision to cancel funding.[5]
A vocal supporter of Canadian federalism, Basilio criticized an open letter written by fourteen prominent Italian Montrealers in 1996 on the grounds that allowed for the possibility of Quebec separatism.[6] He wanted to seek the Liberal Party of Canada nomination for Anjou—Rivière-des-Prairies in the 1997 federal election, but ultimately chose not to stand against party favourite Yvon Charbonneau.[7] In 2007, he ran for the Liberal nomination in Papineau and finished third against Justin Trudeau.[8]
In 2010, former Member of the National Assembly (MNA) William Cusano was awarded $25,000 in a defamation suit against Giordano and Il Cittadino Canadese. The paper had printed an anonymous letter during the 2007 federal nomination contest that alleged Cusano supported a "non-Italian" (Trudeau) in return for the promise of a patronage job. The letter also made the false suggestion that Cusano had "a tendency toward alcohol." Quebec Superior Court judge Pierre Journet ruled that the letter was "false and defamatory" and that Giordano had become a co-author by changing its content before publication.[9]
Giordano ran as a Vision Montreal candidate for the amalgamated Montreal city council in the 2001 municipal election. He finished fifth in Saint-Leonard's three-member borough.[10]
Giordano was elected to the Italian Senate in the 2008 general election, representing Italian voters in North America and Central America.[11] A supporter of Silvio Berlusconi's government, he serves on the foreign affairs committee and the committee for Italians living abroad.[12]
2008 Italian general election results: Senate, North and Central America region | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: ARCHIVIO STORICO DELLE ELEZIONI - Consultazione dati: Senato 13/04/2008, Area ESTERO, Ripartizione AMERICA SETTENTRIONALE E CENTRALE, Ministerio dell'Interno, Government of Italy, accessed 27 July 2011. Voters were not required to give a preference vote for any candidate. |
2001 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Saint-Léonard division (three members elected) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal. |
1986 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Eight | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: "Results of council elections in 18 Montreal-area municipalities," Montreal Gazette, 3 November 1986, A8. |
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Eight | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Source: Le Journal de Saint-Léonard, 9 November 1982, pp. 2-4. |