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Italy - Political Flags - Index and Overview

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Political Parties, Movements and Organizations

Abbr. Listed by Italian names Listed by English names
AN
BR
CdL
CCD
CDU
CU
DC
Margherita
DE
FCA
FdL
FdV
FdS
Forza
FN
FSN
Girasole
Dem
LN
LS
LCA
LdP
Ulivo
Margherita
MIS
MSFT
MSI
NPSI
PCI
PdCI
PDI
PdL
PCL
PRC
PDC
PDS
PLI
PMLI
PNM
Pens
PPI
PR
PRI
PSDI
PSI
PR
RI
RnP
SA
SC
SEL
SL
SDI
SdS
Ulivo
Unione
UDEUR
UDC
Verdi
Alleanza Nazionale
Brigate Rosse
Casa delle Libertà
Centro Cristiano Democratico
Cristiani Democratici Uniti
Comunisti Unitari
Democrazia Cristiana
Democrazia č libertà - La Margherita
Democrazia Europea
Federazione dei Communisti Anarchici
Federazione dei Liberali
Federazione dei Verdi
Federazione della Sinistra
Forza Italia
Forza Nuova
Fronte Sociale Nazionale
Girasole
I Democratici
Lega Nord
Lega Sud Ausonia
Lista Comunista e Anticapitalista
Lista di Pietro - Italia dei Valori
L'Ulivo
Margherita (Democrazia č libertà)
Movimento Italia Sociale
Movimento Sociale Fiamma Tricolore
Movimento Sociale Italiano
Nuovo Partito Socialista Italiano
Partito Comunista Italiana
Partito dei Comunisti Italiani
Partito della Democrazia Italiana
Il Popolo della Libertà
Partito Comunista dei Lavoratori
Partito della Rifondazione Comunista
Partito Democratico Cristiano
Partito Democratici di Sinistra
Partito Liberale Italiano
Partito Marxista-Leninista Italiano
Partito Nazionale Monarchico
Partito Pensionati
Partito Popolare Italiano
Partito Radicale
Partito Repubblicano Italiano
Partito Socialista Democratico Italiano
Partito Socialista Italiano
Radicali / Partito Radicale
Rinnovamento Italiano
Rosa nel Pugno
La Sinistra - l'Arcobaleno
Sinistra Critica
Sinistra Ecologia e Libertà
Sinistra e Libertà
Socialisti Democratici Italiani
Studenti di Sinistra
L'Ulivo
L'Unione
Unione Democratici per l'Europa
Unione Democristiana e di Centro
Verdi Federalisti
Anarchic Communists' Federation
Christian Democratic Centre
Christian Democracy
Christian Democratic Party
Christian-Democratic Union and of Center
Communist and Anti-capitalist List
Communist Refoundation Party
Critical Left
Democracy is Freedom
The Democrats
Democrats of the Left
European Democracy
Federalist Greens
Federation of the Greens
Federation of the Liberals
Go Italy!
House of Freedoms
Interethnic Antiracist Association 3 February
Italian Communist Party
Italian Democracy Party
Italian Democratic Socialists
Italian Liberal Party
Italian Marxist-Leninist Party
Italian People's Party
Italian Renewal
Italian Republican Party
Italian Socialist Democratic Party
Italian Socialist Party
Italian Social Movement
Left and Liberty
Left Ecology and Liberty
Left-wing Federation
List of Pietro - Italy of the Values
Movement Social Italy
National Alliance
National Monarchist Party
National Social Front
New Force
New Italian Socialist Party
Northern League
Olive Tree
Party of Italian Communists
Pensioners Party
People of Freedom
Radical Party
Red Brigades
Rose in the Fist
Social Movement Tricolour Flame
Southern League Ausonia
Students of the Left
Sunflower
The Left - The Rainbow
The Olive Tree
The Union
Union of Democrats for Europe
United Christian Democrats
Unitarian Communists
The White Ox-Eye Daisy
Workers Communist Party

See also:


Politics and Flags

The new (1993) electoral law forced the creation of larger political coalitions.

It is worth noticing that the coalitions and some new parties have adopted symbols based on the Italian flag. The Left coalition (for the 1994 elections) symbol was a white circle with red-white-green strips and the word Progressisti (Progressives). In the Middle coalition symbol there are the red-white-green strips tied together. The bigger (and newer) party in the Right coalition is identified by a variation on the Italian flag: the white strip is oblique and narrow and they add the words Forza Italia (Cheer up Italy).

I think all the assemblages use the national colors because:

  • The national flag is not related to any political trend, it's neutral enough to be used by all parties. The new assemblages do not want to be politically extreme, all of them want to persuade the common, politically-middle man.
  • The national flag represents the unity of the nation. One of the new parties, Lega Nord, asserts the independence of the northern part called Padania . The assemblages assert instead the unity of the nation.

Some older parties also have used the national flag in their symbols. Curiously they are left- or right-oriented parties, not middle. In the PCI's (Italian Communist Party) symbol there was a national flag mostly hidden by a red sickle-and-hammer flag: I suppose it meant the communist ideology superimposed over the national identity. Today Rifondazione Comunista (neo-communist party) still has the red flag but the national one is represented as a half-circle in the bottom of the symbol, therefore the superimposition is not so evident. In the MSI's (neo-fascist party) symbol there was a green-white-red flame. PLI (Italian Liberal Party) directly used the national flag with the three letters P L I over the three strips. Both of them are conservative parties: they used national flag and colors to emphasize patriotism. In fact in Italian culture patriotism is considered a conservative idea.
Giuseppe Bottasini, 1995


Overview

The current system of political parties in Italy is complicated due to the great number of parties, their frequent fissions and fusions and name changes, and the electoral system urging the parties to form bigger coalitions and sub-coalitions for the elections. I will try to give an overview of the current (2001/2002) system of parties and coalitions.
There are basically five groups of parties in Italy:
1. The parties that came together to form the right-wing coalition Casa delle Libertà for the 2001 elections.
2. The parties that came together to form the left-wing coalition L'Ulivo for the 2001 elections.
3. The Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation).
4. Regionalist parties.
5. Other parties.

1. Casa delle Libertà (House of Liberties) coalition. This currently joins together five parties or sub-coalitions:
1.1. FI  Forza Italia  (Go, Italy)
1.2. AN  Alleanza Nazionale  (National Alliance)
1.3. Lega Nord  (Northern League)
1.4. UDC  Unione Democristiana e di Centro (Christian-Democratic Union and of Center) sub-coalition, a.k.a Biancofiore The UDC is a sub-coalition of the Casa delle Libertà joining together parties claiming heritage of the old DC Democrazia Cristiana (Christian Democracy). The more left-wing fission products of the DC belong to L'Ulivo, sub-coalition Margherita (see below 2.2)
   1.4.1. CCD  Centro Cristiano Democratico (Christian Democratic Centre)
   1.4.2. CDU  Cristiani Democratici Uniti (United Christian Democrats).
   1.4.3. DE  Democrazia Europea  (European Democracy)
   1.4.4. PDC  Partito Democratico Cristiano  (Christian Democratic Party)
1.5. NPSI or Nuovo PSI  Nuovo Partito Socialista Italiano  (New Italian Socialist Party).

2. L'Ulivo (Olive tree) coalition This currently joins together four parties and sub-coalitions. After the 2001 election the Girasole sub-coalition split into its constituents, the SDI and the Verdi; recently several deputies of the UDEUR left the Margherita group to form an own parliamentary group of the UDEUR.
2.1. DS  Democratici di Sinistra  (Democrats of the Left)
2.2. Margherita (Democrazia č libertà) - La Margherita  (Democracy is Freedom - The White Ox-Eye). The Margherita is a sub-coalition of the L'Ulivo coalition joining together parties claiming heritage of the old DC  Democrazia Cristiana (Christian Democracy). The more right-wing fission products of the DC belong to Casa delle Libertà, sub-coalition UDC (see above 1.4)
   2.2.1. PPI  Partito Popolare Italiano (Italian People's Party)
   2.2.2. Democratici Democrats
   2.2.3. Rinnovamento Italiano (Italian Renewal), a.k.a. Liste Dini
   2.2.4. UDEUR  Unione Democratici per l'Europa (Union Democrats for Europe)
2.3. Girasole (Sunflower) sub-coalition
   2.3.1. Verdi  Federazione dei Verdi (Federation of the Greens)
   2.3.2. SDI  Socialisti Democratici Italiani (Italian Democratic Socialists)
2.4. PdCI  Partito dei Comunisti Italiani (Party of the Italian Communists), a.k.a. Comunisti Italiani

3. Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation Party)

4. Regionalist parties
4.1. SVP  Südtiroler Volkspartei  (South Tyrolian People's Party)
4.2. Union Valdōtaine (Aosta Valley Union)
4.3. Partito Sardo d'Azione (Sardinian Action Party)
4.4. Fronte Nazionale Siciliano Sicilia Indipendente (Sicilian National Front Independent Sicily)
4.5. Autonomisti Trentini (Trentine Autonomists)
4.6. Fronte Giuliano (Julian Front)
4.7. Liga dei Veneti (League of the Venetians)
4.8. Movimento per l'Autonomia della Romagna (Movement for the Autonomy of the Romagna)
4.9. Lega per l'autonomia lombarda (League for the Lombardian Autonomy)
4.10. Lega Sud Ausonia (Southern League Ausonia)
4.11. Lega Sannitica (Samnite League)
4.12. Liga Fronte Veneto (League Front Veneto)

5. Other parties
5.1. Left-wing
   5.1.1. PSDI  Partito Socialista Democratico Italiano (Party of the Italian Social Democrats)
   5.1.2. Radicali di Sinistra (Radicals of the Left)
   5.1.3. Partito della Rifondazione Socialista (Party of the Socialist Refoundation)
   5.1.4. PU  Partito Umanista Italiano  (Italian Humanist Party)
   5.1.5. PUDI  Partito Umanista Democratico Italiano  (Italian Democratic Humanist Party)
   5.1.6. PMLI  Partito Marxista-Leninista Italiano (Italian Marxist-Leninist Party)
5.2. Center
   5.2.1. Partito Liberale (Liberal Party)
   5.2.2. PRI  Partito Repubblicano Italiano (Italian Republican Party)
   5.2.3. F.d.L.  Federazione dei Liberali (Federation of the Liberals)
   5.2.4. Radicali Italiani (Italian Radicals), a.k.a. Partito Radicale or Lista Emma Bonino or Lista Pannella
   5.2.5. Lista di Pietro - Italia dei Valori (List di Pietro - Italy of the Values)
   5.2.6. Partito Pensionati (Pensioners' Party)
   5.2.7. Verdi Federalisti (Federalist Greens)
5.3. Right-wing
   5.3.1. MSFT  Movimento Sociale Fiamma Tricolore (Social Movement Tricolour Flame)
   5.3.2. Movimento Italia Sociale (Movement Social Italy)
   5.3.3. Fronte Sociale Nazionale (National Social Front)
   5.3.4. Forza Nuova (New Force)

Main sources:
- [fwa02], and earlier editions of it
- website of the Camera dei Deputati , the lower house of the Parliament at www.camera.it
- website of the Senato , the upper house of the Parliament at www.senato.it
- websites of the different parties (will be cited with the more detailed discussion of the party)
Marcus Schmöger, 16 July 2002

Additional sources I use for describing the Italian parties (history and programmatics):
- www.riccati.it/ita_rep
- www.iic-berlino.de
- www.grandinotizie.it
- www.cronologia.it
- www.pericles.it
- guide.supereva.it/partiti
- Paolo Carusi (2001) I partiti politici italiani dall'Unità ad oggi. Roma (Edizioni Studium).
- Simona Colarizi (1996) Storia dei partiti nell'Italia repubblicana. Roma (Editori Laterza).
- Girogio Galli (1994) I partiti politici in Italia, 1944-1994. Torino (UTET Libreria).
- A page with all the election emblems of the 2001 election cedweb.mininterno.it:8890
- Election results 2001: cedweb.mininterno.it:8890/camera/B000000.htm, C000000.htm and senato/S000000.htm
Marcus Schmöger, 27 July 2002