David Sassoli
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 2 years ago |
Date of birth | May 30,1956 |
Zodiac sign | Gemini |
Born | Florence |
Italy | |
Spouse | Alessandra Vittorini |
Party | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats |
Office | President of the European Parliament |
Children | Livia Sassoli |
Giulio Sassoli | |
Died | Oncology Referral Center |
Italy | |
Nationality | Italian |
Latest noncurrent party | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats |
Presidential term | July 3, 2019 – January 11, 2022 |
Date of died | January 11,2022 |
Previous position | President of the European Parliament (2019–2022) |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 925730 |
David Sassoli Life story
David Maria Sassoli was an Italian politician and journalist who served as the president of the European Parliament from 3 July 2019 until his death on 11 January 2022. Sassoli was first elected as a member of the European Parliament in 2009.
David Sassoli: European Parliament president dies aged 65
...European Parliament President David Sassoli has died at the age of 65, his spokesman says...
Corona-Virus-pandemic: EU agrees to €500bn rescue Fund
... Our faith in Europe has proved to be right! tweeted the Italian President of the European Parliament, David Sassoli triumphantly, as soon as the EU announced the Minister of Finance the deal...
British EU exit EU: politicians criticise UK proposals
... elsewhere, there was trouble between some of the Brexiteers, according to the President of the European Parliament, David Sassoli Commons Speaker John Bercow, London met...
Brexit: Irish PM, Leo Varadkar, says deal 'very difficult' to date
... True disaster The Prime Minister also President of the European Parliament, David Sassoli in Downing Street on Tuesday, but the MEP of the left hosted the say, made no progress ...
Brexit: the offer is essentially impossible, No 10 source says after PM-Merkel-call
... David Sassoli, said the UK s proposed new customs legislation for Northern Ireland was a long way from something, to agree to the Parliament ...
Johnson denies lying to Queen over Parliament suspension
... The President of the European Parliament, David Sassoli, said there would be no agreement without a backstop - which aims to avoid a hard Irish border after Brexit - in some form...
Johnson denies lying to Queen over Parliament suspension
Boris Johnson has denied lying to The Queen over the advice he gave her over the five-week Suspension of Parliament .
The Prime Minister was speaking after Scotland's highest civil court ruled on Wednesday the shutdown was unlawful.
Asked whether he had lied to the monarch about his reasons for the Suspension , he replied: "Absolutely Not . "
He added: "The High Court in England plainly agrees With Us , but the Supreme Court will have to decide. "
The Power to suspend - or prorogue - Parliament lies with The Queen , who conventionally acts on the advice of the Prime Minister .
The current five-week Suspension began in the Early Hours of Tuesday, and MPs are not scheduled to return until 14 October.
Labour has said it is "more important than ever" That Parliament is recalled after the government published the, an assessment of a reasonable worst-case scenario in The Event of a no-deal Brexit .
Meanwhile, the EU has said it is willing to revisit The Proposal of a Northern Ireland -only backstop to break the Brexit deadlock, despite Mr Johnson ruling this out.
The President of the European Parliament , David Sassoli , said there would be No Agreement without a backstop - which aims to avoid a hard Irish border after Brexit - in some form.
But the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier told MEPs That the "situation in the UK remains serious and uncertain", saying: "We do not have reasons to be optimistic".
He also warned the UK could still leave without a deal, despite Parliament introducing a law to avoid the scenario.
The Yellowhammer document - published on Wednesday after MPs forced its release - warned of food and fuel shortages in a no-deal scenario.
But Mr Johnson insisted the UK "will be ready" to leave the EU by the current 31 October deadline without an agreement "if we have to".
"What you're looking at here is just the sensible preparations - the worst-case scenario - That you'd expect any government to do," he said.
"In reality we will certainly be ready for a no-deal Brexit if we have to do it and I stress again That 's not where we intend to end up. "
But shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell said he was "angry" That MPs would not be able to debate the planning document during the Suspension .
If you had a usual Prime Minister who'd been accused overnight of misleading MPs, of breaking The Law , having been forced to publish a government report warning of riots and food shortages and telling porkies to The Queen ; you would imagine they would emerge a broken, humbled, crushed individual.
Not so Boris Johnson . He emerged characteristically brimming with optimism and confidence.
No deal? He insisted he had got in place the necessary preparations to avoid the sort of dire scenarios forecast.
An agreement with the EU? Yes he was hopeful of getting an agreement.
And Telling Lies to The Queen ? Absolutely Not .
But the difficulty is optimism and confidence only get you so far. MPs want Details . They want Details about what he's actually doing to avoid the grim no-deal forecast and what he's doing to get an arrangement with the EU
And they want Details - or The Truth - about why he chose to prorogue Parliament .
Which means if the judges decide on Tuesday That Parliament should be recalled then I suspect Boris Johnson 's going to need an awful lot More Than bullish bravado.
In a unanimous ruling on Wednesday, the Court of Session in Edinburgh said Mr Johnson's decision to order the Suspension was motivated by the "improper purpose of stymieing Parliament ".
It came after a legal challenge launched by More Than 70 largely pro-Remain MPs and peers, headed by SNP MP Joanna Cherry .
But a ruling last week from The High Court in London had dismissed a similar challenge brought by businesswoman and campaigner Gina Miller .
In their, the judges argued the Suspension of Parliament was a "purely political" move and was therefore "not a matter for the courts".
Mr Johnson has suggested it was "nonsense" to suggest The Move was an attempt to undermine democracy, insisting it is normal practice for a new PM.
Suspension criticisedProrogation normally takes place every year, but the length and timing of the current Suspension - in the run-up to Brexit - has attracted controversy.
Opposition parties have accused the Prime Minister of ordering it to prevent criticism of its Brexit strategy and contingency plans for a no-deal exit.
They backed a move to order the release of communications between No 10 aides about the decision to order the Suspension .
But the government has blocked their release, saying The Request to see e-mails, texts and WhatsApp messages from Dominic Cummings , Boris Johnson 's chief aide, and eight other advisers in Downing Street was "unreasonable and disproportionate".
Queues at ports are among the no-deal consequences explored by the governmentThe Yellowhammer file, which is redacted in parts and almost identical to a version, says in a reasonable worst-case scenario a no-deal Brexit could lead to:
The document also says some businesses could cease trading, and The Black market could grow in response to disruption along the UK's border with Ireland.
"This will be particularly severe in border communities, where both criminal and dissident groups already operate with greater threat and impunity," it added.
It also of "protests and Direct Action " in Northern Ireland as a result of disruption to key sectors.
Michael Gove , the cabinet minister with responsibility for no-deal planning, told the BBC the government had taken "considerable steps" to ensure the safest possible departure after a no-deal Brexit in the Six Weeks since 2 August, the date which appears on the document.
On Wednesday, he said "revised assumptions" will be published "in due course alongside a document outlining the mitigations the government has put in place and intends to put in place".
boris johnson, queen elizabeth ii, unlawful parliament suspension, brexit
Source of news: bbc.com