- Achille Occhetto
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Achille Occhetto (born 3 March 1936), nicknamed Akel, is an Italian political figure.
Biography
Occhetto was born in Turin. He served as the secretary-general of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) between 1988 and 1994 (which became the Democratic Party of the Left halfway through his term in 1991, also known as the PDS, then became a major part of the Democrats of the Left, which is now one of the elements of the Democratic Party (Italy)).
He served as secretary of the youth communist movement from 1963 to 1966 and, subsequently, as regional secretary of the Italian Communist Party in Sicily, distinguishing himself for his war against any kind of mafia.
Appointed in 1986 as national coordinator of the PCI, he became then the party leader in 1988, succeeding to Alessandro Natta. During his secretarship, the party witnessed the collapse of both the Berlin wall and the communist regime in the Soviet Union. He therefore declared the communist experience as over, and dissolved the PCI in order to form a new party, the PDS, characterized by a progressive left-wing stance.
This political shift (known in Italian politics as the Bolognina) was not accepted by approximately one third of the communist members, which refused to join the PDS and instead founded the Communist Refoundation Party.
In 1994, he challenged and was defeated by Silvio Berlusconi in the 1994 election, leading the Alliance of Progressives; because of this negative result he then quit the party secretaryship.
He came actively back in politics for the 2004 European elections, being elected to the European Parliament on a joint ticket with anti-corruption campaigner Antonio Di Pietro, but he immediately resigned to be replaced by Giulietto Chiesa. After the 2006 General election he returned to the European Parliament by taking up one of the seats vacated by an elected Deputy, and sits as an Independent member of the Party of European Socialists group.
It has been recently rumoured about a possible joining of Occhetto to the Communist Refoundation Party, but he sharply denied this possibility, affirming to have supposed just the birth of a "Left-Wing Refoundation", including Democrats of the Left, Greens, SDI and the Communist Refoundation Party itself.
Party political offices Preceded by
Alessandro NattaSecretary of the Italian Communist Party
1988–1991Succeeded by
(party dissolved)Preceded by
(none)Secretary of the Democrats of the Left
1991–1994Succeeded by
Massimo D'AlemaExternal links
Categories:- 1936 births
- Living people
- People from Turin (city)
- Italian communists
- Italian Communist Party politicians
- MEPs for Italy 2004–2009
- Democrats of the Left politicians
- Democratic Party of the Left politicians
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