Tuesday, November 25, 2008


Adventures in Italian Politics

Italian transvestite ex-MP triumphs as reality TV star

2 hours, 21 minutes ago

ROME (AFP) - The first transvestite elected to the Italian parliament, Vladimir Luxuria, garnered the votes of most TV viewers Monday night as the winner of the reality TV show "Celebrity Island."

The 43-year-old served in parliament for two years as a member of the Refoundation Communist Party before losing his bid for re-election in April.

Over the past six weeks Luxuria, whose real name is Wladimiro Guadagno, has been a star on reality TV, trying to survive living on the beaches of Honduras with other celebrity "survivors". In the end viewers picked Luxuria as their favourite.

"I admired his capacity to defy the prejudices of his companions," said Giorgio Gori, the show's producer.

Gori added that in the beginning his communist party members and voters "no doubt did not appreciate seeing their former deputy in a bikini, but the public rewarded his choice."

Luxuria plans to give half of the 100,000 euros (128,000 dollars) prize money to the UN children's agency UNICEF.

Born a man who dresses as a woman, Luxuria, also an actor, has become an icon of the Italian gay movement and easily won his seat in parliament in 2006 representing a district in Rome.


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Italian far-right party offers money for babies named after Mussolini

2 hours, 49 minutes ago

By The Associated Press

ROME - What's in a name? A little extra cash, if the name is that of Italy's wartime Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini or his wife.

A far-right party is offering the equivalent of $2,400 Cdn to parents in southern Italian villages who name their children Benito or Rachele after the Mussolinis.

An official with the neo-Fascist Fiamma Tricolore party, Vincenzo Mancusi, says "they are nice names."

He says the initiative is a way to pay homage to his party's roots and keep alive names that are rarely used.

Mancusi said Tuesday the bonus applies to five villages in the Basilicata region where birth rates are especially low.

Designed as an incentive, it applies to babies who are born in 2009.