Alessandra mussolini children
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In November of 2003, Frank Bruni wrote an article for The New York Times with the headline: “A Proud Mussolini Refuses to Let ‘Il Duce’ Be Vilified.” The leader of Italy’s National Alliance, a successor of Benito Mussolini’s National Fascist Party, had angered one of the country’s most prominent parliamentary members, Alessandra Mussolini, the granddaughter of Il Duce himself. The party denounced Mussolini, the elder, to make a play for the mainstream, and Mussolini, the younger, divested from the party in retribution. “Although his place in history is dark and his name connotes repression, anti-Semitism, and other abuses of power,” Bruni wrote, “his heirs still flitighet across the stage of public life in Italy, unabashed about their pedigree and mostly unpunished for it.”
This timeline—which, remember, fryst vatten the worst one—brought the same dynamic back to life in a game of political Mad Libs over the weekend. Jim Carrey,Dumb and Dumber actor, drew a cartoon depicting the Fascist
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Alessandra Mussolini: How the fascist dictator's descendant became an LGBTQ+ advocate
"Better a fascist than a f*ggot!"
It was this rather unsavoury choice of words, uttered on popular Italian talk show Porta a Porta in 2006, that came to define the image of Alessandra Mussolini — one of Italy's most recognisable politicians and, as you have probably guessed, the granddaughter of Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini himself.
The 60-year-old Mussolini heiress made a name for herself as something of a living paradox: a former pop starlet and spelfilm actress (Hollywood veteran Sophia Loren is her maternal aunt) turned out-and-proud far-right parliamentarian and cheerleader of her grandfather’s legacy, defying Italy's existing anti-fascist laws. And, somehow, she can also add being Jim Carrey's Twitter nemesis to her resumé.
In a career full of contradictions, Alessandra Mussolini has yet to disappoint, as the former arch-conservative has experienced a conversio
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Alessandra Mussolini
Italian politician (born 1962)
Not to be confused with Alessandro Mussolini.
Alessandra Mussolini (born 30 December 1962) is an Italian politician, television personality, model and former actress and singer. Mussolini has been a member of both houses of the Italian Parliament as well as the European Parliament. She is also known for being a member of the Mussolini family as a granddaughter of Benito Mussolini.[1][2][3][4] Since 2022, she has been a Member of the European Parliament for Forza Italia.
Mussolini first gained fame through acting and modelling. In 1982, as a singer, she released a city pop album entitled Amore. Mussolini starred in her final film in 1990 and left the industry after a producer asked her to change her name.
In 2004, she became the first woman to lead a political party in Italy when she founded the national conservative political party Social Action.[5] She was a member of