Alessandro Ciriani

Italian politician
Alessandro Ciriani
Ciriani in 2024.
Mayor of Pordenone
Incumbent
Assumed office
20 June 2016[1]
Preceded byClaudio Pedrotti
President of the Province of Pordenone
In office
8 June 2009 – 27 October 2014[1]
Preceded byElio De Anna
Succeeded byClaudio Pedrotti
Personal details
Born (1970-08-02) 2 August 1970 (age 53)[1]
Pordenone, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy[1]
Political partyCentre-right independent[1]
Alma materUniversity of Trieste
Professionemployee[1]

Alessandro Ciriani (born 2 August 1970, in Pordenone) is an Italian politician.[1][2]

He served as President of the Province of Pordenone from 2009 to 2014.[1]

Ciriani ran as an independent for the office of Mayor of Pordenone at the 2016 Italian local elections, supported by a centre-right coalition.[1][3] He won and took office on 20 June 2016.[1][3]

In 2024, he ran for European Parliament on the Fratelli d'Italia party list in North East Italy constituency.[4][5] He received 44 027 preference votes and was elected.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Alessandro Ciriani". Ministry of the Interior of Italy. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Alessandro Ciriani. Sindaco". Comune di Pordenone (in Italian). Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Le urne dicono Alessandro Ciriani: eletto sindaco con quasi il 59%". Il Gazzettino (in Italian). 19 June 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  4. ^ "Tutti i candidati italiani alle elezioni europee del 2024" (in Italian). 2024-05-02. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  5. ^ "Le liste con i candidati dei principali partiti italiani per le elezioni europee". Il Post (in Italian). 2024-05-02. Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  6. ^ "Eligendo: Europee [Scrutini] Italia + Estero (In complesso) - Europee, amministrative e regionale (Piemonte) 8-9 giugno 2024 e ballottaggi - Ministero dell'Interno". Eligendo (in Italian). Retrieved 2024-06-25.
  • "Alessandro Ciriani". Ministry of the Interior of Italy. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  • "Alessandro Ciriani. Sindaco". Comune di Pordenone (in Italian). Retrieved 20 May 2019.
Political offices
Preceded by
Claudio Pedrotti
Mayor of Pordenone
since 2016
Incumbent
Preceded by President of the Province of Pordenone
2009–2014
Succeeded by
Claudio Pedrotti
  • v
  • t
  • e
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)


Flag of ItalyPolitician icon

This article about a mayor in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Stub icon

This article about a Friuli-Venezia Giulia politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e