Gianni Cipriano Photography | Archive

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • About
  • Contact
  • PORTFOLIO
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
573 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Seats with the names of Giovanni (Falcone) and Paolo (Borsellino), the two anti-mafia judges assassinated by the mafia in 1992, are here at the entrance of Sconzajuoco, the beach by Addiopizzo in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
Roma, febbraio 2013. Circa 800.000 persone si presentano in Piazza San Giovanni per il comizio conclusivo dello Tsunami Tour di Beppe Grillo, leader del Movimento 5 Stelle, durante la campagna elettorale per le elezioni politiche.<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Comedian and leader of the Five Stars Movement Beppe Grillo (center) looks at the co-founder of the movement Gianroberto Casaleggio (right) as he walks towards the backstatge after giving a short speech during the closing rally for the general elections in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne de
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 22 FEBRUARY 2013: Beppe Grillo, a comedian and leader of the 5 Stars Movement (M5S, Movimento 5 Stelle) rallies during the last rally of his "Tsunami Tour" in Piazza San Giovanni, in Rome on February 22, 2013. Wrapping up his election campaign in Rome, Grillo said "there are 800,000 thousand of you here - with 150,000 watching our live streaming, and 120 squares in Italy watching us".<br />
<br />
Grillo, whom presents itself as a "non-politician", and the 5 Stars Movement as "not a party", has been running a mostly internet-based political campaign through the party's blog and the local groups that have emerged from it. The movement has a strong anti-politics agenda: "All political parties are crooked and they all need to go", Grillo says.<br />
<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 22 FEBBRAIO 2013: Beppe Grillo, comico e leader del Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S), fa un comizio durante la tappa finale dello "Tsunami Tour"  a Piaza San Giovanni, a Roma il 22 febbraio 2013. A conclusione del comizio, Beppe Grillo ha dichiarato: "Siamo 800.000 e 150.000 in streaming, con 120 piazze collegate".<br />
<br />
Grillo, il quale si presenta come un "non-politica", e il Movimento 5 Stelle come un "non-partito", svolge la maggior parte della propria campagna elettorale su internet, tramite il suo blog e i meetup locali. Il movimento ha un'agenda dalle connotazioni antipolitiche: "I partiti sono finiti e i politici se ne devono andare", sostiene Grillo.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento i
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • Sympathisers and supporters of the Five Stars Movement listen to former comedian Beppe Grillo, blogger and leader of the movement, during his last campaign rally for the general election in San Giovanni square (the square where left-wing party and unions<br />
historically rallied) where he attracted more than 500,000 people according to various estimates, making it one of the biggest political rallies ever seen in Italy, in Rome, Italy, on February 22nd, 2013.<br />
<br />
In the general elections of February 24-25, the Five Stars Movement won 25.6% of the vote for the Chamber of Deputies, more than any other single party though both the Italy Common Good centre-left coalition, centred on the Democratic Party, and the centre-right alliance, centred on The People of Freedom, obtained more votes as coalitions.
    CIPG_20130222_ELE2013_GRILLO_Roma__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: The gazebo and sitting area of  Sconzajuoco, the beach managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Entrance of Sconzajuoco, the beach managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Bathers are here by the Sconzajuoco beach, managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Entrance of Sconzajuoco, the beach managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Travel, is here at his workstation at the Addiopizzo Travel headquarters in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo Travel is a tour operator that emerged as a branch of Addiopizzo; it is an extension of the ethical consumer strategy against  the pizzo that specifically targets the tourism field.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Addiopizzo stickers are here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: The bulletin board here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: The meeting room of the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: An Addiopizzo t-shirt hangs on a wall of tearsheets of news related to the pizzo phenomenon, here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Addiopizzo t-shirts hang on a wall of tearsheets of news related to the pizzo phenomenon, here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: The conference room at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: A reading corner at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in Piazza Magione, in the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in Piazza Magione, in the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in Piazza Magione, in the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Entrance of Sconzajuoco, the beach managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 23 AUGUST 2014: Addiopizzo bags are on sale here at Sconzajuoco, the beach managed by the Addiopizzo Committee in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 23rd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140825_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: (L-R) Chiara Utro (31) and Francesca Vannini Parenti (33) of the Addiopizzo Travel staff, work here at the headquarters in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo Travel is a tour operator that emerged as a branch of Addiopizzo; it is an extension of the ethical consumer strategy against  the pizzo that specifically targets the tourism field.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • ISOLA DELLE FEMMINE, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Travel, steps inside the Addiopizzo Travel headquarters in Isola delle Femmine, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo Travel is a tour operator that emerged as a branch of Addiopizzo; it is an extension of the ethical consumer strategy against  the pizzo that specifically targets the tourism field.<br />
 <br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Addiopizzo stickers are here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Travel, sits in the meeting room of the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: An Addiopizzo t-shirt hangs on a wall of tearsheets of news related to the pizzo phenomenon, here at the Addiopizzo headquarters in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: "The people who pay the pizzo are a people without dignity", the phrase that appeared  is written here at the headquarters of the Addiopizzo in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in a street of the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in a street of the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in a street of the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in a street of the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in a street of the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 22 AUGUST 2014: Edoardo Zaffuto (38), co-founder of Addiopizzo and Addiopizzo Trave, poses for a portrait in Piazza Magione, in the "Kalsa" district in Palermo, Italy, on August 22nd 2014.<br />
<br />
Addiopizzo (English: "Goodbye Pizzo") is a grassroots movement  founded in Palermo in 2001 whose goal is to establish to build a community of businesses and consumers who refuse to pay the "pizzo", the Mafia extortion money.
    CIPG_20140822_NEWSWEEK_AddioPizzo__M...jpg
  • CAPACI, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022:  The spot on the highway where a bomb placed by mobsters killed anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone, his wife Francesca Morvillo and his escort agents is seen here in Capaci, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “In short, we are taking back control of our Palermo,”<br />
she added.
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_Mavic2...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: The tomb of anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone is seen here in the church of San Domenico in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “In short, we are taking back control of our Palermo,”<br />
she added.
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-00...jpg
  • CAPACI, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022:  The bulding from which mobsters detonated the bomb that killed anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone, his wife Francesca Morvillo and his escort agents is seen here in Capaci, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “In short, we are taking back control of our Palermo,”<br />
she added.
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_Mavic2...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Branco", a series of sculptures by Velasco Vitali is seen here in front of the tomb of anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone in the church of San Domenico as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-00...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Branco", a series of sculptures by Velasco Vitali is seen here in front of the tomb of anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone in the church of San Domenico as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-00...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_Mini2P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_Mini2P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_Mini2P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Branco", a series of sculptures by Velasco Vitali is seen here in the church of San Domenico as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “In short, we are
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-01...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: A detail of "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, sh
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: A detail of "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, sh
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "L'Albero dei tutti", a sculpture by Gregor Prugger is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo, as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. “I
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-05...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Il Trionfo della Memoria", a sculpture by Peter Demetz is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. �
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-04...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Il Trionfo della Memoria", a sculpture by Peter Demetz is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. �
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-04...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 MAY 2022: "Il Trionfo della Memoria", a sculpture by Peter Demetz is seen here in the church of Santa Maria dello Spasimo as part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a public art program designed to build trust in institutions and ensure mobsters never gain a foothold in the city again in Palermo, Italy, on May 24th 2022.<br />
<br />
<br />
Until recently, Palermo was infamous as the Mafia capital of the world. A turning point in the establishment of law and order was the murder of Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s a famous judge who pioneered new methods to combat the Mafia and paved the way to the organization’s demise. The Mafia had its revenge in 1992, detonating a powerful bomb under a road near Capaci in Palermo’s hinterland. The explosion killed Falcone, his wife and three escorts.<br />
<br />
To mark the 30th anniversary of the tragedy on Monday, Palermo unveiled seven art<br />
installations reminding people of the city’s dark Mafia years, and encouraging local residents to<br />
resist creeping mafia influence. Part of the Spazi Capaci (Capaci Spaces), a three-year public art<br />
series taking place mainly in the Sicilian capital, the works were inaugurated as dignitaries<br />
including Sergio Mattarella, the President of Italy, arrived in Palermo for a commemoration<br />
ceremony remembering Falcone. The project has been organized by the Fondazione Falcone, an anti-Mafia organization in Palermo, with funding provided by the Education Ministry and private donors. “We have always<br />
known that culture is one of the best weapons against the Mafia,” said Maria Falcone, the sister<br />
of the murdered judge and President of the Fondazione Falcone. “Repression alone is not<br />
enough to beat the Mafia,” she added. “You also need social and cultural work for that.”<br />
Capaci Spaces aims to inspire residents to take pride in their city by making Palermo more<br />
beautiful, Falcone said. Displaying art in public places could also show that the city belongs to<br />
everybody, not just the mafiosi, she said. �
    CIPG_20220524_NYT-Palermo-Art_A74-04...jpg
Next