Name Giuliano Ferrara | Role Italian Politician | |
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Full Name Giuliano Ferrara Born 7 January 1952 (age 72) ( 1952-01-07 ) Rome, Italy Political party Italian Communist Party (1973-1989) Italian Socialist Party (1989-1994) Forza Italia (1994-2008)
Independent (2008-present) Spouse Anselma Dell'Olio (m. 1987) Parents Maurizio Ferrara, Marcella de Francesco Similar People Maurizio Ferrara, Claudio Cerasa, Anselma Dell'Olio, Marco Travaglio, Gad Lerner |
Giuliano ferrara vs luca telese apprendista giornalista sei negato fate condurre me
Giuliano Ferrara (born in Rome on January 7, 1952) is an Italian politician, journalist, founding editor of Il Foglio, and TV presenter.
Contents
- Giuliano ferrara vs luca telese apprendista giornalista sei negato fate condurre me
- Life and career
- Legal problems
- Abortion
- Europes Christian roots
- References

Life and career

Ferrara came from a family of Communists: his father Maurizio was a communist senator. Ferrara was active in the Italian Communist Party during his twenties. In 1982, he broke with the party and became vocal as an ex-Communist. Influenced by the political philosopher Leo Strauss, he initially gravitated toward socialism, but later moved toward social conservatism. He was in the Berlusconi I Cabinet and founded the newspaper Il Foglio.

He has been one of strongest supporters of Pope Benedict XVI. Althogh considered by his opponents a "devout atheist", he now considers himself a theist.

He is married with writer Anselma Dell'Olio, who fought for woman's rights in the feminist movements during the 1960s and 1970s.
Legal problems

In 2003, Antonio Tabucchi wrote an article about bad facts about Giuliano Ferrara for the French newspaper Le Monde, but the article was never published because Giuliano Ferrara interfered with them publishing it on its own newspaper Il Foglio. He then said that he was happy to have reached the goal to get that article before Le Monde newspaper. He was condemned for unauthorized publishing and for copyright infrangement.
Abortion
In 1989 Ferrara used the pages of Corriere della Sera to criticize what he perceived as a decline in male responsibility following the introduction of the first abortion pills.
In 2008 he ran in the Italian general election on a platform favoring a moratorium on abortion, as part of a theoconservative Italian political current of which he's one of the most prominent leaders. These views might seem surprising, as, during his Communist period, by his own acknowledgment three of his partners had abortions.
Europe's Christian roots
Ferrara agrees with the Catholic Church regarding the defense of the Judeo-Christian roots of Europe.