Italian Democratic Socialists

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Italian Democratic Socialists
Socialisti Democratici Italiani

Italian National Party
Leader Enrico Boselli
Founded November 14, 1994 (as Italian Socialists)
May 10, 1998 (as Italian Democratic Socialists)
Headquarters Piazza San Lorenzo in Lucina, 26
00186 Rome
Coalition The Union
Political ideology Social democracy, Democratic socialism
International affiliation Socialist International
European affiliation Party of European Socialists
European Parliament Group Party of European Socialists
Membership 71,783 (2006, [1])
Official newspaper Avanti!, MondOperaio
Website http://www.sdionline.it
See also Politics of Italy

Political parties in Italy
Elections in Italy

The Italian Democratic Socialists (Socialisti Democratici Italiani, SDI) is a small social-democratic party in Italy. The party leader is Enrico Boselli and is considered the direct continuation of the Italian Socialists, which were the principal party formed on the ruins of the Italian Socialist Party.

Contents

SDI is one of the heirs of the old Italian Socialist Party (PSI), born in 1998 by the convergence of the Italian Socialists (Enrico Boselli, Roberto Villetti and Ottaviano Del Turco), the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (Gian Franco Schietroma and Giorgio Carta), a portion of Labour Federation, a portion of the Socialist Party (Ugo Intini) and the Socialist League (Claudio Martelli and Bobo Craxi).

In the 1999 European Parliament election, the first important election contested, the Democratic Socialists scored 2.2% and elected two MEPs. For the 2001 general election, the party formed a unsusual alliance with the far-left Federation of the Greens, The Sunflower, which was disbanded early after the election, because of the bad result (only 2.2% together, while the combined result of the two parties in 1999 was 4.0%) and because of political disagreements. In the 2004 European Parliament election, two SDI MEPs were elected on the Olive Tree ticket.

In 2001 Claudio Martelli and Bobo Craxi left the party in order to form with Gianni De Michelis the New Italian Socialist Party (NPSI), while Giorgio Carta left in 2004 to re-form the Italian Democratic Socialist Party.

In 2005 SDI entered in alliance with the Italian Radicals, a libertarian party, forming the Rose in the Fist list. In 2006 Socialist Unity of Claudio Signorile joined the SDI, while some members of NPSI, as Donato Robilotta, founded the Reformist Socialists and joined directly the Rose in the Fist.

In the 2006 general election the list scored only 2.6%, much lesser than the electoral sum of the two parties before the alliace (Radicals alone took 2.3% in the 2004 European Parliament election). It seemed that the Radicals lost voters in their strongholds in the North to Forza Italia, while the Socialists lost ground in the South, where they are more radicated, to the Olive Tree parties (see electoral results of the Rose in the Fist).

In April 2007, at the fifth national congress of SDI, Enrico Boselli launched the proposal of a "Socialist Constituent Assembly", open to all the Italian social-democrats and above all to the remnants of the old PSI. The proposal was immediately accepted by Lanfranco Turci, Peppino Caldarola and Emanuele Macaluso (all three formerly members of DS), Gianni De Michelis, Alessandro Battilocchio and Mauro Del Bue (who will contest the next national congress of NPSI on the idea), Bobo Craxi and Saverio Zavettieri, Rino Formica, Valdo Spini and, to some extent, by Gavino Angius and Fabio Mussi, who were all special guests of the congress.

The proposed Constituent Assembly will lead to a new social-democratic party (probably named "Italian Socialist Party"), which will put an end to the Socialist diaspora and which could form a federation with the Italian Radicals (whose leader Emma Bonino insisted that "the Rose in the Fist" is not dead at the congress), the European Republican Movement and the Federation of Italian Liberals.

Only Ottaviano Del Turco supported the entry of SDI in the Democratic Party and Enrico Boselli was re-elected secretary of the party with 784 votes out of 787 and only 3 abstentions[1]. Thus the party is strongly united behind Boselli, Villetti and Intini, and Del Turco may well remain in the party.

On 5 May 2007, Ottaviano Del Turco and his supporters formed a new group named Reformist Alliance, in order to try to bring the Socialists into the Democratic Party. This group is a faction within the SDI, but in the future it may leave it and join the PD.

On 23 May 2007, Del Turco entered as independent in the promoting committee of the PD, while remaining member of the SDI. Anyway, the day later, Enrico Boselli announce the exclusion of Del Turco from the party, a decision which was described by Del Turco himself as "Stalinist".

The first meeting of the Socialist Constituent Assembly is scheduled on 14 July 2007.

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