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Loris Fortuna
Minister for the Coordination of Community Policies
In office
31 July 1985 – 5 December 1985
Prime Minister Bettino Craxi
Preceded by Francesco Forte
Succeeded by Fabio Fabbri
Minister for the Coordination of Civil Protection
In office
1 December 1982 – 4 August 1983
Prime Minister Amintore Fanfani
Preceded by Giuseppe Zamberletti
Succeeded by Vincenzo Scotti
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
16 May 1963 – 5 December 1985
ConstituencyUdine
Personal details
Born(1924-01-22)22 January 1924
Breno, Lombardy, Italy
Died5 December 1985(1985-12-05) (aged 61)
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Political party Italian Communist Party (1946–1956)
Italian Socialist Party (1957–1985)
Alma mater University of Bologna
ProfessionPolitician, lawyer

Loris Fortuna (22 January 1924 – 5 December 1985) was an Italian left-wing politician. [1]

Biography

Born in Breno, province of Brescia, he was a partisan during World War II, and initially joined the Italian Communist Party (PCI), leaving it in 1956, and crossing the floor to the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), after the anti-Soviet revolts in Hungary were suppressed by the Soviet Red Army. His first ran in elections in 1963; two years later, he promoted, as first signer, the law on divorce, but he then decided not to submit it to the examination on Parliament.

In 1970, however, Fortuna decided to finally present his proposal of law, together with liberal colleague Antonio Baslini, gaining support from the PCI, the PSI, the PSDI, the PSIUP, the PRI and the PLI, but opposed by the Christian Democratic Party. The Radical Party and the left-leaning Lega Italiana per il Divorzio (LID) supported the law outside Parliament. The law, which legalized and regulated divorce in Italy, was then approved on December 1, 1970. This law is known as "Fortuna–Baslini law". [2]

In 1974, The Christian Democrats tried to repeal it via a national referendum, but failed, with 59.3% of Italians favourable to maintain the law on divorce. During the referendum campaign, Fortuna bound up with Radical leader Marco Pannella, and then joined his party, but continuing to be member of the Socialist Party. The support by the leftist parties, most notably the PCI, was instrumental in preserving the Divorce Law.

Subsequently, Fortuna was a strong supporter and promoter also for the law on abortion, which was depenalized in 1978 and survived to another referendum in 1981. He died in Rome, soon after having asked Bettino Craxi for an electoral alliance between the PSI and the Radicals.

In 2005, the name of Loris Fortuna came back to national political scene, following the formation of the Rose in the Fist, an electoral alliance including Radicals and Socialists, and openly based on the principles of José Luis Zapatero, Tony Blair and Fortuna himself.

References