Cosimo Cannito
Italian politician
Cosimo Cannito | |
---|---|
Mayor of Barletta | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office 29 June 2022 | |
Preceded by | Prefectural Commissioner |
In office 15 June 2018 – 13 October 2021 | |
Preceded by | Pasquale Cascella |
Succeeded by | Prefectural Commissioner |
Personal details | |
Born | Cosimo Damiano Cannito (1951-04-10) 10 April 1951 (age 73) Barletta, Apulia, Italy |
Political party | Centre-right independent (since 2018) |
Other political affiliations | PSI (till 1994) SI (1994-1998) SDI (1998-2007) PSI (2007-2018) |
Alma mater | University of Naples Federico II |
Profession | Physician, University professor |
Cosimo Cannito (born 10 April 1951) is an Italian politician, mayor of Barletta from 2018 to 2021 and again since 2022.
Biography
Former member of the Italian Socialist Party, Cannito ran as an independent for the office of Mayor of Barletta at the 2018 Italian local elections, supported by a centre-right coalition. He won and took office on 15 June 2018.[1]
On 13 October 2021, Cannito was ousted from the office of mayor by the majority of the comunal councilors, being later re-elected mayor at the 2022 elections.[2]
See also
- 2018 Italian local elections
- 2022 Italian local elections
- List of mayors of Barletta
References
- ^ "Risultati elezioni comunali 2018 a Barletta. Cosimo Damiano Cannito vince le elezioni amministrative con il 53,0% dei voti". Il Sole 24 Ore (in Italian). Retrieved 15 May 2019.
- ^ "Barletta passa al centrodestra, Cannito nuovo sindaco: "Oggi è una città libera". Ma l'affluenza crolla al 44%". La Repubblica (in Italian). 26 June 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
External links
- "Cosimo Cannito". Ministry of the Interior of Italy (in Italian). 23 February 2017. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Pasquale Cascella | Mayor of Barletta 2018-2021 | Succeeded by Under Prefectural Commissioner management |
Preceded by Under Prefectural Commissioner management | Mayor of Barletta since 2022 | Succeeded by Incumbent |
- v
- t
- e
Mayors of provincial capitals of Italy
- Agrigento
- Francesco Miccichè (centre-right)
- Alessandria
- Giorgio Abonante (PD)
- Ancona
- Daniele Silvetti (FI)
- Andria
- Giovanna Bruno (PD)
- Arezzo
- Alessandro Ghinelli (centre-right)
- Ascoli Piceno
- Marco Fioravanti (FdI)
- Asti
- Maurizio Rasero (FI)
- Avellino
- Laura Nargi (I)
- Barletta
- Cosimo Cannito (centre-right)
- Belluno
- Oscar De Pellegrin (centre-right)
- Benevento
- Clemente Mastella (NC)
- Bergamo
- Elena Carnevali (PD)
- Biella
- Marzio Olivero (FdI)
- Bolzano
- Renzo Caramaschi (PD)
- Brescia
- Laura Castelletti (centre-left)
- Brindisi
- Giuseppe Marchionna (centre-right)
- Caltanissetta
- Walter Tesauro (UdC)
- Campobasso
- Marialuisa Forte (centre-left)
- Carbonia
- Pietro Morittu (PD)
- Caserta
- Carlo Marino (PD)
- Catanzaro
- Nicola Fiorita (centre-left)
- Chieti
- Diego Ferrara (PD)
- Como
- Alessandro Rapinese (I)
- Cosenza
- Franz Caruso (PSI)
- Cremona
- Andrea Virgilio (PD)
- Crotone
- Vincenzo Voce (I)
- Cuneo
- Patrizia Manassero (PD)
- Enna
- Maurizio Dipietro (IV)
- Fermo
- Paolo Calcinaro (I)
- Ferrara
- Alan Fabbri (LN)
- Foggia
- Maria Aida Episcopo (centre-left)
- Forlì
- Gian Luca Zattini (LN)
- Frosinone
- Riccardo Mastrangeli (FI)
- Gorizia
- Rodolfo Ziberna (FI)
- Grosseto
- Antonfrancesco Vivarelli Colonna (centre-right)
- Imperia
- Claudio Scajola (centre-right)
- Isernia
- Piero Castrataro (centre-left)
- La Spezia
- Pierluigi Peracchini (CI)
- L'Aquila
- Pierluigi Biondi (FdI)
- Latina
- Matilde Celentano (FdI)
- Lecce
- Adriana Poli Bortone (IS)
- Lecco
- Mauro Gattinoni (centre-left)
- Livorno
- Luca Salvetti (centre-left)
- Lodi
- Andrea Furegato (PD)
- Lucca
- Mario Pardini (centre-right)
- Macerata
- Sandro Parcaroli (LN)
- Mantua
- Mattia Palazzi (PD)
- Massa
- Francesco Persiani (LN)
- Matera
- Domenico Bennardi (M5S)
- Modena
- Massimo Mezzetti (PD)
- Monza
- Paolo Pilotto (PD)
- Novara
- Alessandro Canelli (LN)
- Nuoro
- Andrea Soddu (I)
- Oristano
- Massimiliano Sanna (RS)
- Padua
- Sergio Giordani (centre-left)
- Parma
- Michele Guerra (IC)
- Pavia
- Michele Lissia (PD)
- Perugia
- Vittoria Ferdinandi (centre-left)
- Pesaro
- Andrea Biancani (PD)
- Pescara
- Carlo Masci (FI)
- Piacenza
- Katia Tarasconi (PD)
- Pisa
- Michele Conti (LN)
- Pistoia
- Alessandro Tomasi (FdI)
- Pordenone
- Alessandro Ciriani (centre-right)
- Potenza
- Vincenzo Telesca (PD)
- Prato
- Ilaria Bugetti (PD)
- Ragusa
- Giuseppe Cassì (I)
- Ravenna
- Michele De Pascale (PD)
- Reggio Emilia
- Marco Massari (PD)
- Rieti
- Daniele Sinibaldi (FdI)
- Rimini
- Jamil Sadegholvaad (PD)
- Rovigo
- Valeria Cittadin (centre-right)
- Salerno
- Vincenzo Napoli (PD)
- Sassari
- Giuseppe Mascia (PD)
- Savona
- Marco Russo (PD)
- Siena
- Nicoletta Fabio (centre-right)
- Sondrio
- Marco Scaramellini (LN)
- Syracuse
- Francesco Italia (Az)
- Taranto
- Rinaldo Melucci (I)
- Teramo
- Gianguido D'Alberto (centre-left)
- Terni
- Stefano Bandecchi (AP)
- Trani
- Amedeo Bottaro (PD)
- Trapani
- Giacomo Tranchida (PD)
- Trento
- Franco Ianeselli (centre-left)
- Treviso
- Mario Conte (LN)
- Trieste
- Roberto Dipiazza (FI)
- Udine
- Alberto Felice De Toni (centre-left)
- Varese
- Davide Galimberti (PD)
- Verbania
- Giandomenico Albertella (I)
- Vercelli
- Andrea Corsaro (FI)
- Verona
- Damiano Tommasi (centre-left)
- Vibo Valentia
- Enzo Romeo (centre-left)
- Vicenza
- Giacomo Possamai (PD)
- Viterbo
- Chiara Frontini (I)
This article about a mayor in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about an Apulia politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e