ROME (AP) Four Italians were tapped on Friday to be senators for life, including renowned architect Renzo Piano and maestro Claudio Abbado, who was La Scala's music director for nearly 20 years.
President Giorgio Napolitano also chose Carlo Rubbia, a Nobel -winning physicist, and Elena Cattaneo, a pharmacologist and noted researcher on brain stem cells, to hold one of the nation's highest honors.
Italy's head of state is allowed to nominate five Italians who have distinguished themselves for social, scientific, artistic or literary contributions that enhance the nation's prestige in the world. Napolitano's first pick was Mario Monti, an economist, whom he made a lifetime senator in late 2011, shortly before asking him to head a government tasked with keeping Italy from succumbing to a worsening sovereign bond crisis.
Senators-for-life have voting rights in Parliament's upper house and do not have to stand for election. They traditionally aren't exponents of any political party, although Italy's politicians have sometimes counted on them to cast ballots at crucial moments, such as confidence votes linked to a government's survival.
Senators-for-life are usually elderly and selected after a lifetime of work. Other such recipients have included Giovanni Agnelli, the late Fiat auto empire patriarch, and Giulio Andreotti, the late former seven-time premier.