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Andrea Agresti

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Andrea Agresti
Deputy mayor of Grosseto
In office
7 May 1997 – 4 April 2005
Preceded byAnna Maria Spada
Succeeded byGabriele Bellettini
Member of the Provincial Council of Grosseto
In office
19 July 2004 – 10 October 2005
Member of the Regional Council of Tuscany
In office
27 April 2005 – 17 June 2015
Personal details
Born (1953-11-24) 24 November 1953 (age 70)
Roccastrada, Province of Grosseto, Italy[1]
Political partyItalian Social Movement
National Alliance
The People of Freedom
New Centre-Right
Children4[2]

Andrea Agresti (born 24 November 1953) is an Italian politician who served as a member of the Regional Council of Tuscany (2005–2015) and deputy mayor of Grosseto (1997–2005).[2]

Life and career

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Agresti was born in Roccastrada, province of Grosseto, on 24 November 1953. He works as a construction entrepreneur.[2]

After a long period of activism in the Youth Front, in 1975 he was elected for the first time as a municipal councilor for the Italian Social Movement in Grosseto. In 1995, he joined the National Alliance, a party for which he served as a member of the national assembly and the provincial executive. In 1997, he took on the role of deputy mayor of Grosseto and assessor of public works and civil protection. He was reconfirmed deputy mayor in May 2001.[2]

In 2000, Agresti ran for the Tuscan regional election, where he received 9,555 votes but was not elected. In 2004, he was elected to the Provincial Council of Grosseto.[2]

Agresti was elected at the Regional Council of Tuscany in the 2005 regional election. Within the Tuscan assembly, he held various positions, including vice president of the Sixth Commission "Territory and Environment", a member of the Special Labor Commission, chairman of the Inquiry Commission on waste separation, and a member of the Special Commission on relations with the European Union and the international activities of the Region. In 2009, he joined the People of Freedom party, for which he was a member of the provincial board in Grosseto and a member of the national council.[2]

In the 2010 Tuscan elections, he was again elected in the Grosseto constituency on the People of Freedom list and was reconfirmed as a member of the Sixth Commission "Territory and Environment," serving as vice president.[3]

After the dissolution of the People of Freedom party in 2013, he chose not to join the new Forza Italia.[4] On 20 November 2013, he joined of the New Centre-Right party, of which he served as treasurer.[2] He ended his term as a regional councillor in June 2015.[1]

His son Luca also served as deputy mayor of Grosseto from 2016 to 2021.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Agresti Andrea". Ministry of the Interior. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Agresti Andrea". Regional Council of Tuscany. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  3. ^ "Speciale Elezioni 2010. Toscana - Circoscrizione di Grosseto". la Repubblica. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  4. ^ Barbara Farnetani (17 November 2013). "Agresti dice no a Forza Italia: La mia storia è nella Destra sociale". Il Giunco.

Bibliography

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  • Bonifazi, Emilio (2015). Grosseto e i suoi amministratori dal 1944 al 2015. Grosseto: Innocenti Editore.
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