The Right La Destra | |
---|---|
Secretary | Francesco Storace |
Vice Secretary | Nello Musumeci |
Founded | 14 July 2007 |
Dissolved | 18 February 2017 |
Split from | National Alliance |
Merged into | National Movement for Sovereignty |
Headquarters | Via Sebastiano Conca 6, Rome |
Newspaper | Il Giornale d'Italia (online) |
Youth wing | Italian Youth |
Ideology | Right-wing populism [1] Neofascism [2] [3] National conservatism [4] |
Political position | Far-right [5] |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
European Parliament group | Union for Europe of the Nations |
Website | |
http://www.ladestra.com | |
The Right (Italian : La Destra) was a neofascist and national-conservative [4] political party in Italy. Its founder and leader was Francesco Storace.
On 3 July 2007 Storace announced his resignation from National Alliance (AN) in a letter posted on his website, claiming that AN had become too centrist and moderate and in protest against the lack of internal democracy in the party, and on 27 July he announced the formation of a new party.
On 10 November the party was founded in a constituent congress in Rome. On that occasion the Sicilian Alliance of Nello Musumeci merged into The Right, and Daniela Santanchè, a leading female member of AN, left the party to join The Right, [6] broadening its appeal, as she was close to the Italian Liberal Party (PLI) and never joined the Italian Social Movement (MSI). In January 2008 Unitalia, a minor party in South Tyrol, and Taverna List, a minor party in the province of Trentino, merged into The Right.
As the party was organised as a federal structure, Unitalia and Taverna List became the provincial sections of the party in the Provinces of South Tyrol and Trento, respectively, as Sicilian Alliance had become the regional section of the party in Sicily. [7]
On 27 February 2008 it was announced that The Right would contest the 2008 general election in alliance with Tricolour Flame, outside The People of Freedom-led centre-right coalition, in a joint list known as The Right–Tricolour Flame. [4] Daniela Santanchè was the candidate for Prime Minister of Italy, and leader of the joint list between the two parties.
On 18 January 2008 Giancarlo Pagliarini joined the party. Pagliarini is a libertarian and keen fiscal federalist who was a leading member of Lega Nord from 1991 to 2007 and was close to the independentist wing of the party. [8] He headed the coalition list in Lombardy for the Senate.
Despite several well-known candidates, the party gained only 2.4% and thus failed to surpass the 4% threshold for entering the Chamber of Deputies. Also Storace, who topped the list in his home-region Lazio, failed re-election, as the coalition stopped at 3.2%, five points below the 8% regional threshold. [9]
On 20 July 2008, during a party convention, Storace resigned from party leadership, opening way for a national congress and a leadership election. [10] This election would also decide the party's electoral strategy, choosing either to continue an independent path or to join The People of Freedom (PdL) of Silvio Berlusconi. Storace favoured the first option, while Santanchè favoured an alliance with Berlusconi. [11] Storace would continue to be party secretary at least until the November congress and after if party members decided so. [12]
On 22 August 2008 Santanchè presented her candidacy for the party leadership, competing against Storace, who would stand again as candidate. [13] However, on 28 September, Santanché resigned as spokesperson and from the party, opening the possibility for a more consensual congress. [14] On 9 November Storace was re-elected secretary during a party congress. On that occasion he remarked that he did not exclude a future alliance with PdL. [15]
In October 2008 the party suffered another split led by Stefano Morselli, who launched Federal Right, [16] and Paolo Casolari, journalist, one of the founders and head of the party in Emilia-Romagna. In November Santanchè launched her Movement for Italy. [17] Both parties were expected to join PdL, while a third party resulting from the split, Libertarian Right led by Luciano Buonocore, joined it. [18]
In the 2009 European Parliament election the party ran as part of The Autonomy, an alliance including the Movement for the Autonomies, the Pensioners' Party and the Alliance of the Centre, [19] [20] gaining 2.2% of the vote, resulting in no seats in the European Parliament. For the 2010 regional elections Storace signed a national pact with the PdL under which The Right supported PdL or Lega Nord candidates for President in all 13 regions where an election took place. [21]
In the 2012 Sicilian regional election, Nello Musumeci ran for President for the centre-right coalition, but lost to Rosario Crocetta of the Democratic Party. [22]
In the 2013 general election, held in February 2013, the party obtained 0.7% of the vote, gaining no seats. [23]
On the occasion of the 2014 European Parliament election The Right supported the candidates of Forza Italia. [24]
On 18 February 2017 the Right, together with National Action, merged into the new party called National Movement for Sovereignty. [25]
The party defined itself the party of the "social, national and popular right" and promoting patriotism, Catholic values and national cohesion. Among other things, The Right was strongly supportive of direct democracy and of presidentialism. Its economic policy was a mixture of statism, such the strong support for the welfare state and the introduction of the so-called "social loan" (mutuo sociale) for young people to enable them to purchase a house, and of libertarian proposals, such as the introduction of the flat tax and fiscal federalism.
Party leader Francesco Storace maintained that his party had nothing to do with the far right and instead he says to take inspiration from Indro Montanelli, a conservative-liberal journalist and editor of Il Giornale who declared "I am a right-winger, but this is not the right-wing I dreamt of". Although the party distanced itself from The People of Freedom, it also rejected any alliance with the parties of the far right, such as New Force and Tricolour Flame, with which it had formed a joint list for the 2008 general election. [26]
The party in 2007–2008 had 7 MPs: 4 deputies (Teodoro Buontempo, Antonio Pezzella, Roberto Salerno and Daniela Santanchè) and 3 senators (Stefano Losurdo, Stefano Morselli and Francesco Storace himself). Leading members of the new party include Nello Musumeci, MEP, Paolo Danieli and Michele Florino, both former senators, Alberto Arrighi, former editor of Area (the journal of Social Right, a faction of AN), Paolo Agostinacchio, former mayor of Foggia, and Nuccio Carrara (former under-secretary for Reforms in Berlusconi's governments).
The first opinion poll after the announcement of Storace put The Right at 3.2%. [27] According to this survey, The Right may steal votes both from National Alliance and from Social Action, Alessandra Mussolini's party. Other polls have placed the party around 5%. [28] After the fall of Romano Prodi government, The Right was placed at 3.3%. [29]
However, in the 2008 general election, the party was damaged by its choice to run alone and won only 2.4% of the vote. In that occasion the party was particularly strong in Central Italy: 3.6% in Umbria, 3.4% in Lazio and the Marche. [30]
Chamber of Deputies | ||||||
Election year | # of overall votes | % of overall vote | # of overall seats won | +/– | Leader | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 884,961 (#7) | 2.4 | 0 / 630 | – | ||
2013 | 219,816 (#11) | 0.6 | 0 / 630 | – |
Senate of the Republic | |||||
Election year | # of overall votes | % of overall vote | # of overall seats won | +/– | Leader |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 686,926 (#7) | 2.1 | 0 / 315 | – | |
2013 | 221,112 (#10) | 0.7 | 0 / 315 | – |
Election year | # of overall votes | % of overall vote | # of overall seats won | +/– | Leader |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | 681,290 (#9) | 2.2 | 0 / 72 | – |
National Alliance was a national conservative political party in Italy. It was the successor of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), a neo-fascist party founded in 1946 by former followers of Benito Mussolini that had moderated its policies over its last decades and finally distanced itself from its former ideology, a move known as post-fascismo, during a convention in Fiuggi by dissolving into the new party in 1995.
The Social Movement Tricolour Flame, commonly known as Tricolour Flame, is a neo-fascist political party in Italy.
Italy of Values is a populist and anti-corruption political party in Italy. The party was founded in 1998 by former Mani pulite prosecutor Antonio Di Pietro, who entered politics in 1996 and finally left the party in 2014. IdV has aimed at gathering and giving voice to different sectors of the Italian society. From the beginning of its existence one of its major issues has been the so-called "moral issue". In the early 2010s, IdV was eclipsed by the new-born Five Star Movement, founded by comedian Beppe Grillo, which used the same populist and anti-corruption rhetoric.
Social Action, previously known as Freedom of Action, was a national-conservative political party in Italy, founded and led by politician Alessandra Mussolini, who is the granddaughter of Benito Mussolini. The party became a faction within Silvio Berlusconi's People of Freedom party.
The Movement for Autonomy is a regionalist and Christian-democratic political party in Italy, based in Sicily. The MpA, whose founder and leader is Raffaele Lombardo, advocates for greater economic development, autonomy and legislative powers for Sicily and the other regions of southern Italy.
Daniela Garnero, commonly known by her former married name as Daniela Santanchè, is an Italian politician. Between 2010 and 2011 she served as Undersecretary to the Ministry for the Implementation of the Government Program in the Berlusconi IV Cabinet. She is currently the regional coordinator of Brothers of Italy in Lombardy and the Minister of Tourism in the Meloni Cabinet.
The People of Freedom was a centre-right political party in Italy. The PdL launched by Silvio Berlusconi as an electoral list, including Forza Italia and National Alliance, on 27 February for the 2008 Italian general election. The list was later transformed into a party during a party congress on 27–29 March 2009. The party's leading members included Angelino Alfano, Renato Schifani, Renato Brunetta, Roberto Formigoni, Maurizio Sacconi, Maurizio Gasparri, Mariastella Gelmini, Antonio Martino, Giancarlo Galan, Maurizio Lupi, Gaetano Quagliariello, Daniela Santanchè, Sandro Bondi, and Raffaele Fitto.
The Liberal Democrats, whose complete name is Liberal Democrats for Renewal, is a liberal and centrist political party in Italy.
The Right–Tricolour Flame was an Italian political coalition formed by two neofascist party: The Right of Francesco Storace and Tricolour Flame of Luca Romagnoli on 15 February 2008 in the run-up to the 2008 general election.
The Abruzzo regional election of 2008 took place on 14–15 December 2008, due to the early resignation of President Ottaviano Del Turco, after his indictment for alleged corruption. The election was to take place on 30 November–1 December, but was postponed because of legal issues over the ammission of the list of For the Common Good.
Movement for Italy was a conservative political party in Italy led by Daniela Santanchè.
Alliance of the Centre, whose full name is Alliance of the Centre for the Territories, is a Christian-democratic political party in Italy.
The Autonomy was a heterogeneous electoral coalition of political parties in Italy, formed in the run-up to the 2009 European Parliament election in order to overcome the 4% threshold introduced in the electoral law in February 2009. The list was affiliated to Libertas.eu and disbanded after the European election.
Future and Freedom, whose full name was Future and Freedom for Italy, was a political party in Italy, comprising both liberal and national conservative elements.
Cantiere Popolare is a Christian-democratic political party in Italy, based in Sicily.
Brothers of Italy is a national-conservative and right-wing populist political party in Italy, that is currently the country's ruling party. It became the largest party after the 2022 Italian general election. The party is led by Giorgia Meloni, the incumbent Prime Minister of Italy. Meloni's tenure has been described as the "most right-wing" republican government since World War II, whilst her time in government is frequently described as a shift towards the far-right in Italian politics.
The National Movement for Sovereignty was a national-conservative political party in Italy, founded on 18 February 2017, with the merger of National Action and The Right. Its founders were Gianni Alemanno and Francesco Storace, both former ministers and former leaders of the two founding parties, respectively.
Popular Agreement was a small political party in Italy led by Giampiero Catone.
The Movement for the National Alliance was a coalition of right-wing political parties in Italy, which was an unsuccessful attempt to refound the National Alliance.
The Green Front, whose complete name is Green Front – Independent Ecologists, is a green political party in Italy, led by Vincenzo Galizia, a former leader of the "National Youth".
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)