National Alliance (Italy)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Alleanza Nazionale)
Jump to: navigation, search
National Alliance
Alleanza Nazionale

Italian National Party
Leader Gianfranco Fini
Founded 11 December 1993 (as MSI-National Alliance)
27 January 1995 (as National Alliance)
Headquarters Via della Scrofa, 43
00186 Rome
Coalition House of Freedoms
Political ideology National conservatism, Conservatism
International affiliation none
European affiliation Alliance for Europe of the Nations
European Parliament Group Union for Europe of the Nations
Membership 250,000 (2004, [1])
Official newspaper Il Secolo d'Italia
Website http://www.alleanzanazionale.it
See also Politics of Italy

Political parties in Italy
Elections in Italy

National Alliance (Alleanza Nazionale, AN) is a national-conservative Italian political party. It is led by Gianfranco Fini and it is part of the House of Freedoms coalition.

Contents

National Alliance was formed by current secretary Gianfranco Fini from the Italian Social Movement (MSI), the ex-neo-fascist party, which was declared dissolved in January 1995, and conservative elements of the former Christian Democracy, which had disbanded in 1994 after two years of scandals and various splits due to corruption at its highest levels, exposed by the Mani Pulite investigation, and the Italian Liberal Party, disbanded in the same year. Former MSI members were however still the bulk of the new party.

The logo followed a template very similar to the Democratic Party of the Left, with the previous logo in a small circle (as a means of legally preventing others from using it). The name was suggested by an article on the Italian newspaper Il Tempo written in 1992 by Domenico Fisichella, a prominent conservative academic.

In January 1995, as officially Gianfranco Fini proclaimed MSI's dissolution, and the foundation of the AN, he announced the abandonment MSI's ideological stances, symbols, gestures and salutes that had closely identified it with the Mussolinian past.

The party was part of all three House of Freedoms coalition governments led by Silvio Berlusconi. Gianfranco Fini was notably nominated deputy prime minister in 2001 and was Foreign Minister from November 2004 to May 2006.

When Gianfranco Fini visited Israel in late November 2003 in the function of Italian deputy prime minister, he labeled the racial laws issued by the fascist regime in 1938 as "infamous". He also referred to the RSI as belonging to the most shameful pages of the past, and considered fascism part of an era of "absolute evil". As a result, Alessandra Mussolini, the granddaughter of the former fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, and some hardliners left the party and formed Social Action.

In occasion of the 2006 general election, AN re-proposed the House of Freedoms (with new allies). Surprisingly the centre-right lost by just 24,000 votes in favor of the centre-left The Union. Individually AN received nearly 5 million votes, amounting to 12.3%. The party won 41 out of 315 senators and 71 out of 630 deputies.

On 27 July 2007, a group of splinters, led by Francesco Storace, formed The Right party, which was officially founded on 10 November. Seven MPs of AN, including Teodoro Buontempo and Daniela Santanchè, joined the new party. The split may cause electoral losses for AN, but it is unclear of what relevance. Some opinion polls put The Right between the 3 and 5% and AN well below 10%.[1][2]

National Alliance's political program emphasizes:

Distinguishing itself from the MSI, the party has distanced itself from Benito Mussolini and Fascism and made efforts to improve relations with Jewish groups. With most hardliners leaving the party, it seeks to present itself as a respectable conservative party and to join forces with Forza Italia in the European People's Party and, eventually, in an united party of the centre-right.

Nearly two-thirds of the party's supporters approve of the capitalist system and hold favourable views on the privatisation of state industries, however AN is more to the left from Forza Italia on economic issues and sometimes supports statist policies.

Gianfranco Fini, a modernizer, has impressed an ambitious political line to the party, combining the pillars of conservative ideology like security, family values and patriotism with a progressive approach in other areas such as stem-cell research and supporting voting rights for legal aliens. Anyway some of these positions are not shared by many members of the party, most of whom staunchly oppose stem-cell research and artificial insemination.

National Alliance is a heterogeneous political party and within it members are divided in different factions, some of them very organized:

In the party there is also a group named Ethic-Religious Council, whose board members include Gaetano Rebecchini (Founder, ex-DC), Riccardo Pedrizzi (President), Gustavo Selva (Honorary President, ex-DC), Franco Tofoni (Vice President), Luigi Gagliardi (General Secretary), Alfredo Mantovano, Antonio Mazzocchi and Riccardo Migliori. This is not a faction but an official organism within the party and express the official position of the party on ethical and religious matters. Sometimes the group criticizes Gianfranco Fini for his liberal views on abortion, artificial insemination and stem-cell research, which led some notable ex-DC members as Publio Fiori to leave the party. Some members of the Council, such as Pedrizzi and Mantovano are described as members of a unofficial Catholic Right faction.

Logo of the National Alliance for the 2006 general election.
Logo of the National Alliance for the 2006 general election.

The party has roughly 10-15% support across Italy, having it stongholds in central and southern Italy (Lazio 18.6%, Umbria 15.2%, Marche 14.3%, Abruzzo 14.3%, Puglia 13.2%, Sardinia 12.9%, Tuscany 12.6% and Campania 12.6% in the last general election), scoring badly in Lombardy (10.2%) and Sicily (10.9%), while competing in the North-East (Friuli-Venezia Giulia 15.5% and Veneto 11.3%) with the Lega Nord, its ally in the centre-right House of Freedoms coalition. The relationship of AN with the Northern League can be tense at times, especially about issues of national unity, but the two parties share views on other issues such as immigration; AN's views are normally slightly more moderate than Lega Nord's.

The party had a good showing in the first general election contested (13.5% in 1994) and reached 15.7% in 1996, when Fini tried for the first time to replace Silvio Berlusconi as leader of the centre-right. From that moment the party suffered an electoral decline, but remains the third force of Italian politics.

In 1998, it had a membership of 485,657 in 11,539 branches, 89 deputies and 41 senators in the Italian Parliament and nine members of the European Parliament.

In the Italian general election, 2006 May 2001 general election AN obtained 96 seats out of 630 in the Chamber of Deputies and 46 seats out of 324 in the Senate. The party lost a few key seats in the 2003 local elections such as the Province of Rome, but its position remained firm. The party obtained 11.5% of the vote and 9 seats in the June 2004 European Parliament elections. In the 2005 regional elections AN lost almost all the remaining key seats, such as the Region of Lazio.

For the April 2006 general election, the party presented a new logo, which includes the name of Fini in it. In the Lower chamber, AN received 4,703,256 votes (12.3%), thus securing 71 seats. In Senate, where Berlsuconi's coalition managed to retain majority, the National Alliance (Alleanza Nazionale) got 4,234,693 votes (12.4%) and thus 41 seats.

The electoral results of National Alliance in the 10 most populated Regions of Italy are shown in the table below.

1994 general 1995 regional 1996 general 1999 European 2000 regional 2001 general 2004 European 2005 regional 2006 general
Piedmont 8.3 11.2 12.1 7.5 11.9 9.2 8.8 9.5 11.8
Lombardy 5.8 10.0 9.0 6.0 9.7 8.6 7.2 8.7 10.2
Veneto 7.7 10.7 11.7 8.3 9.8 8.5 9.0 8.1 11.3
Emilia-Romagna 9.0 10.3 11.5 8.6 11.4 9.7 8.4 8.9 10.2
Tuscany 10.9 13.1 15.8 10.9 14.9 13.0 10.9 10.9 12.6
Lazio 25.3 24.5 28.9 20.3 23.1 20.4 18.4 23.9[3] 18.6
Campania 20.3 18.3 18.7 10.7 11.2 13.1 13.2 10.6 12.6
Apulia 27.5[4] 20.4 17.9 12.7 15.5 15.3 16.0 12.1 13.2
Calabria 17.2 16.3 23.4 10.2 10.4 15.2 15.5 9.9 11.0
Sicily 14.0 14.1 (1996) 16.4 12.1 11.3 (2001) 10.7 14.5 10.6 (2006) 10.9
ITALY 13.5 - 15.7 10.3 - 12.0 11.3 - 12.3

  1. ^ http://www.sondaggipoliticoelettorali.it/asp/visualizza_sondaggio.asp?idsondaggio=2436
  2. ^ http://www.storace.it/Storace/page.asp?I=0&VisImg=S&Art=1256&Cat=2&IdTipo=1
  3. ^ Combined result of National Alliance (16.9%) and Lista Storace (7.0%), personal list of AN regional leader Francesco Storace.
  4. ^ Forza Italia failed to present a list and thus most centre-right voters voted for National Alliance.
Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.