Giorgio La Malfa | |
Order1: | Minister of Budget and Economic Planning |
Primeminister1: | Francesco Cossiga Arnaldo Forlani Giovanni Spadolini |
Term Start1: | 4 April 1980 |
Term End1: | 1 December 1982 |
Predecessor1: | Beniamino Andreatta |
Successor1: | Guido Bodrato |
Order2: | Minister of European Affairs |
Primeminister2: | Silvio Berlusconi |
Term Start2: | 22 April 2005 |
Term End2: | 17 May 2006 |
Predecessor2: | Rocco Buttiglione |
Successor2: | Emma Bonino |
Office3: | Member of the Chamber of Deputies |
Term Start3: | 25 May 1972 |
Term End3: | 14 April 1994 |
Term Start4: | 9 May 1996 |
Term End4: | 14 March 2013 |
Birth Date: | 13 October 1939 |
Birth Place: | Milan, Italy |
Nationality: | Italian |
Profession: | Politician, University professor |
Alma Mater: | University of Pavia St John's College, Cambridge |
Giorgio La Malfa (born 13 October 1939 in Milan)[1] is an Italian politician.
La Malfa was born in Milan, the son of Ugo La Malfa, a long-time Italian political leader and government minister.[2] He read law at the University of Pavia and the economics tripos at St John's College, Cambridge, before working as a research fellow in economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he co-authored a paper on the Italian economy with Franco Modigliani.[3] Upon returning to Italy in 1966 he taught political economy at the University of Catania in Sicily.
La Malfa served as secretary of the Italian Republican Party (PRI) from 1987 to 1993, when he stood down and was indicted to face trial over a corruption scandal.[4] [5] He returned to politics in 1994,[6] and has since 2001 been president of the party.[7] From 2001 to 2005 he was President of the Finances Commission of the Italian Chamber of Deputies.[8] He was Italian minister for European Union Affairs from April 2005[9] until the elections of April 2006, when the centre-right coalition lost its majority; La Malfa was nonetheless elected to Parliament.[10] La Malfa was re-elected to the Chamber in the 2008 Italian general election with The People of Freedom, but on 24 September 2009 he announced his detachment from the Berlusconi IV Cabinet through a letter published by Corriere della Sera.[11]
On 8 June 2011 he was expelled from PRI by the party's college of arbitrators, for having voted against the Berlusconi Cabinet on 14 December 2010. He was readmitted into the party in March 2019.[12]