In 1985, Cito founded the local television station
Antenna Taranto 6 (AT6); his channel found great success and Cito became very popular in his city also because, intercepting the dissatisfaction with the bankruptcy management of the city administration led by the
Christian Democracy and the
Socialist Party in the early 1990s, he created a political column in which he denounced the offences committed by local administrators. In 1997 some of his family members bought the historic
Lucanian broadcaster Tele Basilicata Matera, whose operational headquarters were soon transferred to Taranto. Between 2003 and 2007, during his detention to serve the sentence for external competition in association with
organized crime, he graduated in Legal Sciences. In the 1970s, Cito joined the
Italian Social Movement, from which he was expelled because of his extremism. In 1992, Cito founded his own party:
AT6 – Southern Action League, a
far-right meridionalist party. Cito was a candidate for
mayor of Taranto in the
municipal elections of 1993, winning the run-off against the
progressive candidate Gaetano Minervini, who was often insulted by Cito during the electoral campaign through his television channel. In 1996, Cito left the office of mayor in order to be a candidate for the
Chamber of Deputies during the
1996 general elections, managing to gain a seat in
Parliament. In 1997, he became a provocative candidate for the office of
mayor of Milan, contrasting his unbridled
meridionalism to the northern tendencies of the
Lega Nord, while in 2000 he was a candidate for the role of president of
Apulia during the
2000 regional elections. In 1997, Cito was accused of collusion with the
Sacra Corona Unita: he was found guilty in 2002 and imprisoned between 2003 and 2007. During the years in jail, Cito managed to graduate in
Legal Sciences. In May 2004, he tried to commit
suicide by cutting his
wrist veins; however, he was rescued and saved in time. In 2007, due to the accusation of collusion with organized crime, unable to be candidate again as mayor, he supported his son Mario, who became the party candidate for the role of mayor of
Taranto during the elections of 2007,
2012 and
2017. Cito died on 11 May 2025, after having been resident at a Taranto nursing home for some time. He was 79. == References ==