Simona Malpezzi
Italian politician
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian. (March 2022) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at [[:it:Simona Malpezzi]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|it|Simona Malpezzi}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Simona Flavia Malpezzi (born 22 August 1972) is an Italian politician. She was undersecretary of state for parliamentary relations in the Conte II and Draghi governments from 16 September 2019 to 25 March 2021. On 25 March 2021, she was unanimously elected leader of the Democratic Party in the Senate, succeeding Andrea Marcucci.[1]
Early life
She was born in Cernusco sul Naviglio and lives in Pioltello.
Political career
She was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in the 2013 general election. She was elected to the Italian Senate in the 2018 general election.[2]
See also
References
- v
- t
- e
Democratic Party
- Walter Veltroni (2007–2009)
- Dario Franceschini (2009)
- Pier Luigi Bersani (2009–2013)
- Guglielmo Epifani (2013)
- Matteo Renzi (2013–2017; 2017–2018)
- Maurizio Martina (2018)
- Nicola Zingaretti (2019–2021)
- Enrico Letta (2021–2023)
- Elly Schlein (2023–present)
- Dario Franceschini (2007–2009)
- Enrico Letta (2009–2013)
- Debora Serracchiani (2014–2017)
- Lorenzo Guerini (2014–2017)
- Maurizio Martina (2017–2018)
- Paola De Micheli (2019)
- Andrea Orlando (2019–2021)
- Peppe Provenzano (2021–2023)
- Irene Tinagli (2021–2023)
- Romano Prodi (2007–2008)
- Anna Finocchiaro (2008–2009)
- Rosy Bindi (2009–2013)
- Gianni Cuperlo (2013–2014)
- Matteo Orfini (2014–2019)
- Paolo Gentiloni (2019–2020)
- Valentina Cuppi (2020–2023)
- Stefano Bonaccini (2023–present)
- Marina Sereni (2009–2013)
- Ivan Scalfarotto (2009–2013)
- Matteo Ricci (2013–2017)
- Sandra Zampa (2013–2017)
- Barbara Pollastrini (2017–2019)
- Domenico De Santis (2017–2019)
- Debora Serracchiani (2019–2023)
- Anna Ascani (2019–2023)
- Loredana Capone (2023–present)
- Chiara Gribaudo (2023–present)
- Antonello Soro (2007–2009)
- Dario Franceschini (2009–2013)
- Roberto Speranza (2013–2015)
- Ettore Rosato (2015–2018)
- Graziano Delrio (2018–2021)
- Debora Serracchiani (2021–2023)
- Chiara Braga (2023–present)
- Anna Finocchiaro (2007–2013)
- Luigi Zanda (2013–2018)
- Andrea Marcucci (2018–2021)
- Simona Malpezzi (2021–2023)
- Francesco Boccia (2023–present)
- David Sassoli (2009–2014)
- Patrizia Toia (2014–2019)
- Roberto Gualtieri (2019)
- Brando Benifei (2019–present)
- Renziani
- AreaDem
- Remake Italy
- Left is Change
- Democratic Front
- The Populars
- The Olive Tree
- The Union
- L'Unità
- Europa
- Festa de l'Unità
- Centre-left coalition (2007–present)
- Italy. Common Good (2012–2013)
- Grand Coalition (2013)
- 2007
- 2009
- 2013
- 2017
- 2019
- 2023
This article about a Lombardy politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e