Free and Equal Liberi e Uguali | |
---|---|
Leader | Pietro Grasso [lower-alpha 1] |
Founded | 3 December 2017 |
Dissolved | 13 October 2022 |
Ideology | Social democracy [1] Democratic socialism [2] [3] [4] |
Political position | Left-wing |
Website | |
liberieuguali | |
|
Free and Equal (Italian : Liberi e Uguali, LeU) was a left-wing electoral list and parliamentary group in the Chamber of Deputies and a sub-group in the Senate, the two houses of the Italian Parliament. LeU was launched on 3 December 2017 as a federation of political parties including Article 1, Italian Left and Possible. The leader of the alliance for the 2018 general election was Pietro Grasso, former President of the Senate and former anti-Mafia prosecutor. The three founding parties left the alliance in late 2018, but LeU continued to exist in Parliament. Following the 2021 Italian government crisis, LeU had a single minister, Roberto Speranza, in the national unity government of Prime Minister Mario Draghi.
Since the 2013 leadership election of the Democratic Party (PD), in which Matteo Renzi (a centrist) was elected secretary, the party was riven by an internal struggle between Renzi's large majority (composed of renziani , assorted centrists and moderate social democrats) and the left-wing factions which were very critical of Renzi, his government (2014–2016) and his proposed constitutional reform, which was finally voted down in a constitutional referendum in December 2016.
After the splits of Possible (Pos.) and Future to the Left (FaS), Enrico Rossi (leader of the Democratic Socialists faction and President of Tuscany) and Roberto Speranza (leader of Reformist Area and former PD leader in the Chamber of Deputies) became the leaders of the PD's internal left. They were backed by former DS and PD leaders Massimo D'Alema, Pier Luigi Bersani and Guglielmo Epifani. Rossi and Speranza criticised Renzi on many of his policies and were initially joined by Michele Emiliano, President of Apulia. [5] [6] In February 2017, the dissidents (except Emiliano, who stayed in the PD and would unsuccessfully challenge Renzi in the upcoming 2017 leadership election), and a group of SI splinters led by Arturo Scotto (a former DS member too) launched the Article 1 – Democratic and Progressive Movement (MDP), a month after the merger of Left Ecology Freedom (SEL), FaS and minor groups into Italian Left (SI). [7] [8] [9]
Soon after the foundation of the MDP, Roberto Speranza (MDP coordinator), Nicola Fratoianni (SI secretary) and Giuseppe Civati (Pos. secretary) discussed the opportunity of forming a left-wing coalition as an alternative to the centre-left led by the PD, the centre-right and the Five Star Movement (M5S). [10]
In the 2017 Sicilian regional election, the three left-wing parties, along with the Communist Refoundation Party, other parties and groups, ran in a joint list named One Hundred Steps for Sicily with Claudio Fava for President. Fava won 6.2% of the vote, the list 5.2% and only Fava was elected deputy in the Regional Assembly. [11]
During a convention in Rome on 3 December 2017, the MDP–SI–Pos alliance was officially established as Free and Equal (LeU) and Pietro Grasso, President of the Senate and former anti-Mafia prosecutor, was appointed leader and candidate for Prime Minister in the 2018 general election. [12] [13] [14] [15] A few weeks later, also Laura Boldrini, President of the Chamber of Deputies (who had been elected as an independent of SEL in 2013), joined LeU. [16] [17] [18] Another high-profile adherent was Rossella Muroni, who had been the president of Legambiente up to then. [19] In January, LeU was joined also by the Greens of South Tyrol. [20] [21]
In January 2018, shortly before the election, some internal conflict started, with Grasso accused to be uncharismatic and uninfluential on alliance politics. [22]
In March, LeU obtained 3.4% of the vote in the general election, well below expectations [23] [24] and opinion polls, electing 14 deputies and 4 senators. [25] [26]
In May, LeU launched a constituent assembly in Rome with the participation of the MDP, SI and Possible, which agreed on the creation of a party with a single structure and an internal voting system on political issues. [27] In June, the national committee of LeU fixed the founding congress for December. [28] The following day, Beatrice Brignone, who had replaced Civati as secretary of Possible, announced the departure of her party from the alliance. [29]
More internal conflicts broke out between the two remaining parties (MDP and SI) during the summer, especially about political affiliations for the upcoming 2019 European Parliament election and possible alliance with the PD. [30] Between October and December, LeU was successively abandoned by SI [31] [32] and the MDP (focused on the formation of a new "red-green" party) [33] [34] [35] as well as by high-profile members like Boldrini [36] and Muroni.
In January 2019, SI returned into LeU's fold and joined forces with LeU individual members, led by Francesco Laforgia and deputy Luca Pastorino (dissident members of MDP and Possible, respectively), who had formed an association named #Per i molti (For the many), which was later transformed into ÈViva party. [37] [38] [39] In April the two groups, along with the Communist Refoundation Party (PRC) and minor parties, formed The Left, a joint list inspired by the Party of the European Left (PEL). [40] [41] [42] [43] Contextually, the MDP, which was renamed simply "Article One" (Art.1), decided to run with the PD, while Possible joined the FdV-led Green Europe (EV).
In August 2019, tensions grew within the coalition supporting the Giuseppe Conte's first government, leading to the issuing of a motion of no-confidence by the League. [44] During the following government crisis, the national board of the PD officially opened to the possibility of forming a new cabinet in a coalition with the M5S, [45] based on pro-Europeanism, green economy, sustainable development, fight against economic inequality and a new immigration policy. [46] The party also accepted that Conte might continue at the head of a new government, [47] and on 29 August President Mattarella formally invested Conte to do so. [48] The LeU groups had previously already announced their possible support to Conte's second government, [49] which was finally unveiled in September with the appointment of Speranza as Minister of Health. [50]
Following Conte's resignation in January 2021 and the resulting government crisis, LeU joined Mario Draghi's national unity government, with Speranza keeping his ministerial role. The new government provoked shifts within the group. Italian Left chose not to support Draghi, [51] was deserted by one deputy (Erasmo Palazzotto, who voted in favour and left the party) [52] and one senator (Loredana De Petris, who voted in favour, but remained a member) and was joined by two formerly independent senators (Paola Nugnes, who had been elected with the Five Star Movement (M5S) and later alighed with the Communist Refoundation Party) and Elena Fattori (another former Five Star). [53] Additionally, Rossella Muroni (Green Italia) left the group in order to establish a sub-group of the Federation of the Greens within the Mixed Group instead. [54] [55] [56] [57] In July, Devis Dori, another splinter from the M5S, briefly joined LeU in the Chamber, [58] as, in February 2022, he would join EV instead. [59] In March 2022, also Palazzotto left LeU, [60] leaving it with ten deputies.
Party | Main ideology | Leader | |
---|---|---|---|
Democratic and Progressive Movement (MDP) | Social democracy | Roberto Speranza | |
Italian Left (SI) | Democratic socialism | Nicola Fratoianni | |
Possible (Pos) | Progressivism | Giuseppe Civati |
Party | Main ideology | Leader/s | |
---|---|---|---|
Greens of South Tyrol (VGV) | Green politics | Brigitte Foppa and Hans Heiss | |
Sicilian Socialist Party (PSS) | Democratic socialism | Antonio Matasso |
Party | Main ideology | Deputies | Senators | Total MPs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Article One (Art.1) [lower-alpha 1] | Social democracy | 7 | 1 | 8 | |
èViva [lower-alpha 2] | Eco-socialism | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
Italian Left (SI) [lower-alpha 3] | Democratic socialism | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
Fatherland and Constitution (PeC) [lower-alpha 4] | Left-wing nationalism | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
Independents [lower-alpha 5] | 0 | 4 | 5 | ||
Totals | 10 | 6 | 16 |
Election | Leader | Chamber of Deputies | Senate of the Republic | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Position | Votes | % | Seats | Position | ||
2018 | Pietro Grasso | 1,114,799 | 3.39 | 14 / 630 | 6th | 991,159 | 3.28 | 4 / 315 | 6th |
Region | Election year | Votes | % | Seats | +/− |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Piedmont | 2019 | 46,570 (7th) [lower-alpha 1] | 2.42 | 1 / 51 | 1 |
Friuli-Venezia Giulia | 2018 | 11,748 (10th) | 2.78 | 1 / 49 | 1 |
Lombardy | 2018 | 111,296 (7th) | 2.12 | 0 / 80 | – |
South Tyrol | 2018 | 19,391 (4th) [lower-alpha 2] | 6.86 | 3 / 35 | – |
Trentino | 2018 | 3,560 (15th) | 1.40 | 0 / 35 | – |
Emilia-Romagna | 2020 | 81,419 (6th) [lower-alpha 3] | 3.77 | 2 / 50 | – |
Umbria | 2019 | 6,727 (9th) [lower-alpha 4] | 1.61 | 0 / 21 | – |
Lazio | 2018 | 88,416 (8th) | 3.48 | 1 / 50 | 1 |
Abruzzo | 2019 | 16,614 (9th) | 2.77 | 0 / 31 | – |
Molise | 2018 | 4,784 (10th) | 3.39 | 0 / 21 | – |
Sicily | 2017 | 100,583 (9th) | 5.23 | 1 / 70 | 1 |
Sardinia | 2019 | 27,077 (9th) | 3.79 | 2 / 60 | 2 |
Nicola Zingaretti is an Italian politician who served as President of Lazio from March 2013 to November 2022 and was Secretary of the Democratic Party from March 2019 until March 2021.
The Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in Italy. The party's secretary is Elly Schlein, elected in the 2023 leadership election, while the party's president is Stefano Bonaccini.
The Left was a left-wing coalition of political parties in Italy which took part in the 2019 European Parliament election. Its main members were Italian Left and the Communist Refoundation Party.
Massimo D'Alema is an Italian politician and journalist who was the 53rd prime minister of Italy from 1998 to 2000. He was Deputy Prime Minister of Italy and Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2006 to 2008. D'Alema also served for a time as national secretary of the Democratic Party of the Left (PDS). Earlier in his career, D'Alema was a member of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) and was the first former Communist party member to become prime minister of a NATO country and the only former PCI prime minister of Italy. Due to his first name and for his dominant position in the left-wing coalitions during the Second Republic, he is referred to as Leader Maximo. He is also the author of several books.
The Five Star Movement is a political party in Italy. Its leader and president is Giuseppe Conte, Prime Minister of Italy from 2018 until 2021. The M5S was founded on 4 October 2009 by Beppe Grillo, a political activist and comedian, and Gianroberto Casaleggio, a web strategist. The party is primarily described as populist, of the syncretic kind, due to its members' insistence that it has no place in the left–right political spectrum. The party is a proponent of green politics, direct democracy and broadly, progressivism.
The 2018 Italian general election was held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017. Voters were electing the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Italian Republic since 1948. The election took place concurrently with the Lombard and Lazio regional elections. No party or coalition gained an absolute majority in the parliament, even though the centre-right coalition won a plurality of seats as a coalition, and the Five Star Movement (M5S) won a plurality of seats as an individual party.
Lorenzo Guerini is an Italian politician and member of the Democratic Party (PD). Guerini has been serving as the Italian Minister of Defence in the cabinets of successive prime ministers Giuseppe Conte and Mario Draghi from 2019 to 2022. In March 2014, he was chosen by party leader Matteo Renzi to be deputy secretary of the PD along with Debora Serracchiani, a position that he held until May 2017. From 2005 to 2012, he served as mayor of Lodi, Lombardy, his hometown.
Freedom and Rights, whose complete name is Freedom and Rights – European Socialists as a reference to the Party of European Socialists (PES), is a democratic-socialist faction within the Democratic Party (PD), a political party in Italy. Before joining the PD in October 2014, LeD was active mainly as a sub-group within the Mixed Group in the Chamber of Deputies. LeD's leader is Gennaro Migliore.
Maurizio Martina is an Italian politician and former member of the Chamber of Deputies, who served as secretary of the Democratic Party (PD) from March to November 2018, being appointed after the 2018 Italian general election. He served as Minister of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies from 22 February 2014 to 13 March 2018, in the governments of Matteo Renzi and Paolo Gentiloni. On 7 May 2017, he was elected Deputy Secretary of the Democratic Party. Martina resigned as Agriculture Minister and took over as acting secretary of the PD after Matteo Renzi resigned following a poor election showing in 2018.
Possible is a left-wing political party in Italy, launched in Rome on 21 June 2015. The party's founder is Giuseppe Civati, a former prominent member of the Democratic Party (PD). Possible's progressive platform is a mixture of social democracy, democratic socialism, green politics, liberalism and elements of participatory democracy.
Italian Left is a left-wing political party in Italy. SI was launched in November 2015 as a parliamentary group in the Chamber of Deputies, including Left Ecology Freedom (SEL), dissidents from the Democratic Party like Future to the Left, and splinters from the Five Star Movement. At its launch, SI included 32 deputies, who were soon followed by 8 senators, and 2 MEPs. SI was officially formed as a full-fledged party in February 2017, after SEL had chosen to merge into it in December 2016.
The 2017 Democratic Party leadership election was an open primary election held on 30 April 2017. The three candidates were Matteo Renzi, former Prime Minister and party secretary until February 2017, Michele Emiliano, President of Apulia, and Andrea Orlando, the Minister of Justice. Renzi was elected by a landslide 70%, and appointed Maurizio Martina as his deputy secretary.
The Progressive Camp was a left-wing political party in Italy.
Article One, officially Article 1 – Democratic and Progressive Movement, was a social-democratic political party in Italy.
Roberto Speranza is an Italian politician of the Chamber of Deputies who served as national secretary of Article One. From 5 September 2019 until 22 October 2022, he has been serving as Minister of Health in the government of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte and was later confirmed by Prime Minister Mario Draghi. During his tenure, he had to face the COVID-19 pandemic, which deeply affected Italy.
The 2019 European Parliament election in Italy were held on 26 May 2019, electing members of the 9th Italian delegation to the European Parliament as part of the European elections held across the European Union.
The second Conte government was the 66th government of the Italian Republic and the second government led by Giuseppe Conte. The government was sworn in on 5 September 2019 to 13 February 2021.
Action is a liberal political party in Italy. Its leader is Carlo Calenda, a member of the European Parliament within the group of Renew Europe and former minister of Economic Development.
Italia Viva is a liberal political party in Italy founded in September 2019. The party is led by Matteo Renzi, a former Prime Minister of Italy and former secretary of the Democratic Party (PD). As of 2021, Italia Viva is a member of the European Democratic Party.
The 2021 Italian government crisis was a political event in Italy that began in January 2021 and ended the following month. It includes the events that follow the announcement of Matteo Renzi, leader of Italia Viva (IV) and former Prime Minister, that he would revoke IV's support to the Government of Giuseppe Conte.