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The Senate president reported that Eugenio Scalfari, who helped change Italian journalism by founding La Repubblica, a liberal daily that dared to challenge Italy’s conventional newspapers, passed away on Thursday at the age of 98.
While debating a bill, Senate President Maria Elisabetta Alberti Casellati called for a moment of silence to remember one of the greats of Italian journalism.
When it debuted on already packed newsstands in 1976, the Rome-based La Repubblica made history by grabbing readers’ attention with snappy headlines and a tabloid format. Its cheeky writing style contrasted sharply with the austere syntax then employed by Milan-based Corriere della Sera, Italy’s top publication.
Who was Eugenio Scalfari? (Wiki, Age, Bio)
Eugenio Scalfari’s innovative approach worked, and La Repubblica rose to become Italy’s second-largest daily newspaper. In his later years, self-described atheist Scalfari wrote extensively in La Repubblica about lengthy conversations he had with Pope Francis over the phone and in person.
Scalfari stated on television that Pope Francis is the person who fascinates him the most. ” He is a revolutionary.” He identified himself as the pope’s “great friend.”
According to the Vatican’s official media, the pontiff was “devastated” to learn of the passing of his buddy. Francis was committing his soul to the Lord in prayer, the Vatican stated, and “keeps tenderly the recollection of those contacts and of the hard dialogues.”
Scalfari engaged in a number of battles in the early going using the pages of La Repubblica. His was the first major Italian newspaper to call for a reconsideration of the Communist party in Italy, which Christian Democratic-led coalitions had skillfully kept out of power by forming coalitions with a variety of far smaller coalition partners in the past.
After Silvio Berlusconi entered politics in the middle of the 1990s and became the leader of a center-right bloc that would eventually form three Italian governments and make him prime minister, he waged a relentless campaign against him in his weekly articles. La Repubblica charged Berlusconi with entering politics to protect his commercial interests.
In addition to his media empire, Berlusconi also owned a large amount of real estate, advertising firms, and a soccer team. Allegations of conflicts of interest followed him throughout his career.
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