Eugenio Scalfari, who revolutionised Italian journalism, dies aged 98

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Eugenio Scalfari, Who Revolutionised Italian Journalism, Dies Aged 98
Italian journalist Eugenio Scalfari speaks during the televised talk show Otto e Mezzo in Rome in 2016, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Frances D'Emilio, Associated Press

Eugenio Scalfari, who helped revolutionise Italian journalism with the creation of La Repubblica, a liberal daily that boldly challenged traditional newspapers, has died aged 98.

Senate president Maria Elisabetta Alberti Casellati announced Mr Scalfari’s death and led legislators who were debating a Bill in a minute of silence to honour one of the deans of Italian journalism.

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The Rome-based La Repubblica broke ground when it burst on to already crowded newsstands in 1976, grabbing readers’ attention with punchy headlines and a tabloid format.

Its sassy style of writing had little in common with the austere prose then used by Italy’s leading paper, Corriere della Sera, which had its headquarters in Milan.


Journalist Eugenio Scalfari poses with an edition of La Repubblica newspaper in Milan in 1992
Journalist Eugenio Scalfari poses with an edition of La Repubblica newspaper in Milan in 1992 (AP)

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His novel recipe proved a success, and La Repubblica became Italy’s number two daily newspaper.

Italian Premier Mario Draghi praised Mr Scalfari for “the clarity of his prose, the depth of his analyses, the courage of his ideas”, and said the journalist’s death “leaves an unfillable void in the public life of our country”.

Mr Scalfari’s editorials “were fundamental reading for whoever wanted to understand politics, the economy”, Mr Draghi said in a statement.

Mr Scalfari used the pages of La Repubblica to fight a number of battles, and his was the first mainstream Italian paper to urge Italians to re-evaluate Italy’s Communist Party, which successive Christian Democratic-led coalitions had deftly kept out of power by allying with an array of much smaller coalition partners.

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He used his weekly columns to campaign relentlessly against Silvio Berlusconi after the television mogul went into politics in the mid-1990s, leading a centre-right bloc that would eventually form three governments.

La Repubblica hammered away at Mr Berlusconi, repeatedly accusing the then-premier of jumping into politics to safeguard his business interests.

Along with his media empire, Mr Berlusconi also had extensive real estate holdings, advertising companies and a football team.

Conflict of interest accusations dogged him throughout his political career.

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Senators observe a minute of silence in honour of late Italian journalist Eugenio Scalfari, before voting at a decree on various economics matters, at the Senate, in Rome
Senators observe a minute of silence in honour of late Italian journalist Eugenio Scalfari, before voting at a decree on various economics matters, at the Senate, in Rome (Gregorio Borgia/AP)

One of the first tributes following the news of Mr Scalfari’s death nonetheless came from Mr Berlusconi, who still heads the centre-right Forza Italia party he created three decades ago.

“Eugenio Scalfari was a figure of reference for my adversaries in politics,” he tweeted.

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“Today, however, I cannot but recognise that he was a great publisher and journalist, who I always appreciated for his dedication and passion for his work.”

In arguing for a new reading of Italy’s Communist Party, which had been the largest in the West, Mr Scalfari contended it had broken with its Soviet roots.

Many former Communists joined new, leftist parties, which ultimately went on to become coalition partners in several Italian governments.

The appeal of La Repubblica among left-leaning readers became so broad that it increasingly wore away at the readership of the then widely read Communist- and post-Communist – paper l’Unita.

During a career that spanned more than 50 years, Mr Scalfari was called everything from the “Lider Maximo of Italian Journalism”, a reference to a nickname of the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro, to an ideological opportunist.

It was a testament to his enduring influence that even after retiring from his position as editor of La Repubblica in 1996, his weekly columns continued to ruffle feathers.


Italian journalist Eugenio Scalfari with his wife Serena Rossetti as they arrive for an event at the Quirinale Presidential Palace on the eve of the celebrations for the Republic Day in Rome on June 1 2015
Eugenio Scalfari in Rome in 2015 (Fabio Cimaglia/LaPresse via AP)

Mr Scalfari’s life was marked by conspicuous triumphs.

Besides La Repubblica, he was the co-founder of the successful L’Espresso weekly news magazine.

For years, he participated in Italian political life, first with the Italian Radical Party, as a founding member, serving as its national vice secretary between 1958 and 1963, then with the Italian Socialist Party.

Mr Scalfari also served a term in parliament, starting in 1968.

Under his direction, both L’Espresso and La Repubblica adopted tough investigative approaches, exposing some of the many scandals that marked a particularly tumultuous period of post-war Italian history.

Most notably, in 1967, L’Espresso blew the lid off an attempted 1964 coup by an Italian general.

Born in Civitavecchia, a port city near Rome, on April 6 1924, Mr Scalfari studied law before turning to journalism.

He began writing in 1950 for Il Mondo and L’Europeo, two top magazines, leaving in 1955 for the L’Espresso venture.

He served as editor-in-chief of the popular news magazine between 1963 and 1968, and then as the managing director of L’ Espresso publishing company between 1970 and 1975, helping to establish it as one of Italy’s most influential publishing groups.

Mr Scalfari was married to Simonetta De Benedetti, and the couple had two daughters, Enrica and Donata.

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