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Italian Liberal Party

The Italian Liberal Party (Italian: Partito Liberale Italiano, PLI) was a liberal political party in Italy.

Italian Liberal Party
Partito Liberale Italiano
AbbreviationPLI
LeadersGiovanni Giolitti
Luigi Facta
Benedetto Croce
Luigi Einaudi
Enrico De Nicola
Manlio Brosio
Bruno Villabruna
Gaetano Martino
Giovanni Malagodi
Valerio Zanone
Alfredo Biondi
Renato Altissimo
Raffaele Costa
Founded8 October 1922
Dissolved6 February 1994
Preceded byLiberal Union
Succeeded byFederation of Liberals[1]
(legal successor)
Union of the Centre[1]
(split)
NewspaperL'Opinione
Youth wingItalian Liberal Youth
Membership (1958)173,722 (max)[2]
IdeologyLiberalism (Italian)
Political positionCentre-right
National affiliationNational Bloc (1922–24)
National List (1924–26)
CLN (1943–47)
UDN (1946–48)
National Bloc (1948–49)
Centrism (1947–58)
Pentapartito[3] (1980–91)
Quadripartito (1991–94)
European affiliationELDR Party
International affiliationLiberal International
European Parliament groupELDR Group
Colours  Blue

The PLI, which is the heir of the liberal currents of both the Historical Right and the Historical Left, was a minor party after World War II, but also a frequent junior party in government, especially since 1979. It originally represented the right-wing of the Italian liberal movement, while the Italian Republican Party the left-wing. The PLI disintegrated in 1994 following the fallout of the Tangentopoli corruption scandal and was succeeded by several minor parties. The party's most influential leaders were Giovanni Giolitti, Benedetto Croce and Giovanni Malagodi.

History Edit

Origins Edit

The origins of liberalism in Italy are with the Historical Right, a parliamentary group formed by Camillo Benso di Cavour in the Parliament of the Kingdom of Sardinia, following the 1848 revolution. The group was moderately conservative and supported centralised government, restricted suffrage, regressive taxation, and free trade. They dominated Italian politics following the country's unification in 1861, but never formed a party. The Liberals were indeed a loose coalition of local leaders, whose sources of strength were census suffrage and the first-past-the-post voting system.

The Right was opposed by its more progressive counterpart, the Historical Left, which overthrew Marco Minghetti's government during the so-called "parliamentary revolution" of 1876, which brought Agostino Depretis to become Prime Minister. However, Depretis immediately began to look for support among Rightists MPs, who readily changed their positions, in a context of widespread corruption. This phenomenon, known in Italian as trasformismo (roughly translatable in English as "transformism" — in a satirical newspaper, the PM was depicted as a chameleon), effectively removed political differences in Parliament, which was dominated by an undistinguished liberal bloc with a landslide majority until World War I.

Two liberal parliamentary factions alternated in government, a conservative one led by Sidney Sonnino and a progressive one led by Giovanni Giolitti, who started as a member of the Historical Left and served as Prime Minister in 1982–1983, 1903–1905, 1906–1909, 1911–1914 and 1920–1921. Giolitti, whose faction was by far the largest, sought to unify the liberal establishment into a united party, the Liberal Union, in 1913, also with the participation of Sonnino. The Liberals governed in alliance with the Radicals, the Democrats and, eventually, the Reformist Socialists.[4]

The brief party Edit

 
Giovanni Giolitti, five-time Prime Minister of Italy (1892–1921)

At the end of World War I, universal suffrage and proportional representation were introduced. These reforms caused big problems to the Liberals, who found themselves unable to stop the rise of two mass parties, the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and the Italian People's Party (PPI), which had taken the control of many local authorities in northern Italy even before the war. Through the Christian-democratic PPI, Catholics, who were long inactive due to the trauma of the capture of Rome and the struggles between the Holy See and the Italian state, started to be involved in politics, in opposition to both the PSI and the liberal establishment, which had governed the country for virtually sixty years.

The Parliament was thus fundamentally divided in three different blocs and fragmentation brought about instability, with the Socialists and the rising Fascist instigators of political violence on opposite sides. In this chaotic situation, in 1922 the Liberals re-grouped within the Italian Liberal Party (PLI), which immediately joined an alliance led by the National Fascist Party and formed with it a joint list for the 1924 general election, transforming the Fascists from a small political force into an absolute-majority party. The PLI, which failed to subdue the Fascists, was banned by Benito Mussolini in 1926, along with all the other parties, while many old Liberal politicians were given prestigious, but not influential, political posts, such as seats in the Senate, which was stripped of any real power by the Fascist reforms.

Post World War II Edit

 
Luigi Einaudi, President of Italy from 1948 to 1955

The PLI was re-established in 1943 by Benedetto Croce, a prominent intellectual and senator, whose international recognition and parliamentary membership allowed him to remain a free man during the Fascist regime, despite being an anti-fascist himself, and joined the National Liberation Committee. After the end of World War II, Enrico De Nicola, a Liberal, became "provisional Head of State" and another one, Luigi Einaudi, who as Minister of Economy and Governor of the Bank of Italy between 1945 and 1948 had reshaped Italian economy, succeeded him as President of Italy.

In the 1946 general election the PLI, as part of the National Democratic Union, won 6.8% of the vote, which was somewhat below expectations for a coalition representing the pre-Fascist political establishment. Indeed, the Union was supported by all the survivors of the Italian political class before the rise of Fascism, from Vittorio Emanuele Orlando to Radical Francesco Saverio Nitti. In its first years, the PLI was home to very different ideological factions and, for instance, it was successively led by Leone Cattani, a representative of the internal left, and then by Roberto Lucifero, a monarchist-conservative. In 1948 Bruno Villabruna, a moderate, was elected secretary and sought to re-unite all the Liberals under the party (also Cattani, who had left the party after Lucifero's election, returned into the fold).

Giovanni Malagodi Edit

 
Giovanni Malagodi, leader from 1954 to 1972

In Giovanni Malagodi the PLI found a consequential leader. Under his 18 years at the head, Malagodi moved the party further to the right on economic issues. This caused in 1956 the exit of the party's left-wing, including Cattani, Villabruna, Eugenio Scalfari and Marco Pannella, who established the Radical Party. In particular, the PLI opposed the new centre-left coalition which also included the Italian Socialist Party, and presented itself as the main conservative party in Italy.

Malagodi managed to draw some votes from the Italian Social Movement, the Monarchist National Party and especially Christian Democracy, whose electoral base was mainly composed of conservatives suspicious of the Socialists, increasing the party's share to a historical record of 7.0% in the 1963 general election. After Malagodi's resignation from the party's leadership, the PLI was defeated with a humiliating 1.3% in the 1976 general election, but tried to re-gain strength by repositioning in the political centre and supporting social reforms supported by the Radicals, such as divorce.

The Pentapartito Edit

After Valerio Zanone took over as party secretary in 1976, the PLI adopted a more centrist and, to some extent, social-liberal approach. The new secretary opened to the Socialists, hoping to put in action a sort of "lib–lab" cooperation, similar to the Lib–Lab pact experimented in the United Kingdom from 1977 to 1979 between the Labour Party and the Liberals. In 1983 the PLI finally joined the Pentapartito coalition composed also of the Christian Democracy (DC), the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI) and the Italian Republican Party (PRI). In the 1980s the party was led by Renato Altissimo and Alfredo Biondi.

In 1992–1994 the Italian party system was shaken by the uncovering of the corruption system nicknamed Tangentopoli by the Mani pulite investigation. In the first months, the PLI seemed immune to investigation. However, as the investigations further unravelled, the party turned out to be part of the corruption scheme, along with its coalition partners. Francesco De Lorenzo, the Liberal Minister of Health, was one of the most loathed politicians in Italy for his corruption, that involved stealing funds from the sick and allowing commercialisation of medicines based on bribes.

Dissolution and diaspora Edit

The party was disbanded on 6 February 1994 and at least four heirs tried to take its legacy:

In a few years after 1994, most Liberals migrated to FI, while others joined the centre-left coalition, especially Democracy is Freedom – The Daisy (DL).

Re-foundation Edit

The party was re-founded in 1997 by Stefano De Luca and re-took its original name in 2004. The new PLI gathered some of the former right-wing Liberals, but soon distanced itself from the centre-right coalition, led by FI, to follow an autonomous path and try to unite all the Liberals, from left to right, in a single party.

Ideology, position, factions Edit

The party's ideological tradition was liberalism,[5][6][7][8][9][10][11] including different variants and factions. Indeed, as the party was at times the bulwark of secular conservatism and monarchism, it has been variously described as classical-liberal,[11][12] conservative-liberal,[13] liberist[8][11][14] (meaning economically liberal and/or right-libertarian), liberal-conservative,[15][16] and conservative.[17][18][19] The party's political position has been usually described as centre-right[20][21] and to the right of Christian Democracy, but sometimes also centrist.[22][23] The party always included more progressive factions, chiefly including the one that broke away to form the Radical Party in 1956, and, under the leadership of Valerio Zanone, it arguably became a centre-left party: while under Giovanni Malagodi the PLI refused any cooperation with the Italian Socialist Party, under Zanone and the "lib-lab" pact the party became a close ally of the Socialists.[24][25][26] Additionally it held laicist positions more similar to the other two centrist parties in the Pentapartito, Italian Republican Party and Italian Democratic Socialist Party.[23][27][28]

Popular support Edit

Before World Wars the Liberals constituted the political establishment that governed Italy for decades. They had their main bases in Piedmont, where many leading liberal politicians of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Kingdom of Italy came from, and southern Italy. The Liberals never gained large support after World War II as they were not able to become a mass party and were replaced by Christian Democracy (DC) as the dominant political force. In the 1946 general election, the first after the war, the PLI gained 6.8% as part of the National Democratic Union. At that time they were strong especially in the South, as DC was mainly rooted in the North: 21.0% in Campania, 22.8% in Basilicata, 10.4% in Apulia, 12.8% in Calabria and 13.6% in Sicily.[29]

However, the party soon found its main constituency in the industrial elites of the "industrial triangle" formed by the metropolitan areas of Turin, Milan and Genoa. The PLI had its best results in the 1960s, when it was rewarded by conservative voters for its opposition to the participation of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) in government. The party won 7.0% of the vote in 1963 (15.2% in Turin, 18.7% in Milan and 11.5% in Genoa) and 5.8% in 1968. The PLI suffered a decline in the 1970s and settled around 2–3% in the 1980s, when its strongholds were reduced to Piedmont, especially the provinces of Turin and Cuneo, and, to a minor extent, western Lombardy, Liguria and Sicily.[30] By the end of the 1980s, similarly to the other parties of the Pentapartito coalition (Christian Democrats, Socialists, Republicans and Democratic Socialists), the Liberals strengthened their grip on the South, while in the North they lost some of their residual votes to Lega Nord. In the 1992 general election, the last before the Tangentopoli scandals, the PLI won 2.9% of the vote, largely thanks to the increase of votes from the South.[30] After the end of the "First Republic" former Liberals were very influential within Forza Italia (FI) in Piedmont, Liguria and, strangely enough, in Veneto, where a former Liberal, Giancarlo Galan, was three times elected president.

The electoral results of the PLI in general (Chamber of Deputies) and European Parliament elections since 1913 are shown in the chart below.

Electoral results Edit

Italian Parliament Edit

Chamber of Deputies
Election year Votes % Seats +/− Leader
1919 490,384 (5th) 8.6
41 / 508
1921 470,605 (5th) 7.1
43 / 535
  3
1924 233,521 (6th) 3.3
15 / 535
  28
1929 Banned
0 / 535
  15
1934 Banned
0 / 535
1946 1,560,638 (4th)[31] 6.8
31 / 535
  31
1948 1,003,727 (4th)[32] 3.8
14 / 574
  17
1953 815,929 (7th) 3.0
13 / 590
  1
1958 1,047,081 (6th) 3.5
17 / 596
  4
1963 2,144,270 (4th) 7.0
39 / 630
  22
1968 1,850,650 (4th) 5.8
31 / 630
  8
1972 1,300,439 (6th) 3.9
20 / 630
  11
1976 480,122 (8th) 1.3
5 / 630
  15
1979 712,646 (8th) 1.9
9 / 630
  4
1983 1,066,980 (7th) 2.9
16 / 630
  7
1987 809,946 (9th) 2.1
11 / 630
  5
1992 1,121,264 (8th) 2.9
17 / 630
  6
Senate of the Republic
Election year Votes % Seats +/− Leader
1948 1,222,419 (4th)[33] 5.4
7 / 237
  7
1953 695,816 (7th) 2.9
3 / 237
  5
1958 1,012,610 (6th) 3.9
4 / 246
  1
1963 2,043,323 (4th) 7.4
18 / 315
  14
1968 1,943,795 (4th) 6.8
16 / 315
  2
1972 1,319,175 (6th) 4.4
8 / 315
  8
1976 438,265 (8th) 1.4
2 / 315
  6
1979 691,718 (8th) 2.2
2 / 315
1983 834,771 (7th) 2.7
6 / 315
  4
1987 700,330 (9th) 2.2
3 / 315
  3
1992 939,159 (8th) 2.8
4 / 315
  1

European Parliament Edit

European Parliament
Election year Votes % Seats +/− Leader
1979 1,271,159 (7th) 3.6
3 / 81
1984 2,140,501 (5th)[a] 6.1
3 / 81
1989 1,532,388 (5th)[b] 4.4
0 / 81
  3
  1. ^ Jointly with the PRI.
  2. ^ Jointly with the PRI and Marco Pannella.

Regional elections Edit

Regions of Italy
Election year Votes % Seats +/− Leader
1970 1,290,715 (6th) 4.8
27 / 720
1975 749,821 (7th) 2.5
11 / 720
  16
1980 816,418 (7th) 2.7
15 / 720
  4
1985 702,273 (7th) 2.2
13 / 720
  2
1990 630,242 (9th) 2.0
13 / 720
-

Leadership Edit

Symbols Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Luciano Bardi; Piero Ignazi (1998). "The Italian Party System: The Effective Magnitude of an Earthquake". In Piero Ignazi; Colette Ysmal (eds.). The Organization of Political Parties in Southern Europe. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-275-95612-7.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ "la Repubblica: storia d'Italia dal '45 ad oggi, II Pentapartito (1979-1992)". www.storiaxxisecolo.it. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  4. ^ Italian Liberal Party 21 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Britannica Concise
  5. ^ James L. Newell (2010). The Politics of Italy: Governance in a Normal Country. Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-521-84070-5. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  6. ^ Maurizio Cotta; Luca Verzichelli (2007). Political Institutions in Italy. Oxford University Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-19-928470-2. Retrieved 17 July 2013.
  7. ^ Forte, Francesco; Marchionatti, Roberto (2012). "Luigi Einaudi's economics of liberalism". The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 19 (4): 587–624. doi:10.1080/09672567.2010.540346. hdl:2318/90412. S2CID 154450408.
  8. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2014.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  11. ^ a b c "Liberalismo, liberismo e "antistatalismo"". 8 February 2012.
  12. ^ Mario Cannella; Alexey Makarin; Ricardo Pique (March 2021). The Political Legacy of Nazi Annexation (PDF). p. 11. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  13. ^ Michael Steed; Peter Humphreys (1988). "Identifying Liberal Parties". In Emil J. Kirchner (ed.). Liberal Parties in Western Europe. p. 409. ISBN 978-0-52-132394-9.
  14. ^ "IL PLI RIPARTE DAL POLO LAICO". la Repubblica. 20 December 1988.
  15. ^ Emil J. Kirchner (1988). Liberal Parties in Western Europe. p. 453. ISBN 9780521323949. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  16. ^ Oscar W. Gabriel; Frank Brettschneider, eds. (2013). "Politische Konflikte, Willensbildung und Verhalten". Die EU-Staaten im Vergleich: Strukturen, Prozesse, Politikinhalte. Springer-Verlag. p. 254. ISBN 9783322924889.
  17. ^ Linda Basile (2018). The Party Politics of Decentralization: The Territorial Dimension in Italian Party Agendas. Springer. p. 189. ISBN 978-3-319-75853-4.
  18. ^ Tom Lansford, ed. (2013). Political Handbook of the World 2013. SAGE Publications. p. 714. ISBN 978-1-4522-5825-6.
  19. ^ Raffaella Y. Nanetti; Robert Leonardi (2014). "Italy". In M. Donald Hancock; Christopher J. Carman; Marjorie Castle; David P. Conradt; Raffaella Y. Nanetti; Robert Leonardi; William Safran; Stephen White (eds.). Politics in Europe. CQ Press. p. 363. ISBN 978-1-4833-2305-3.
  20. ^ Jones, Erik; Pasquino, Gianfranco (2015). The Oxford Handbook of Italian Politics. Oxford University Press. p. 456.
  21. ^ Cinzia Padovani (2007). A Fatal Attraction: Public Television and Politics in Italy. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 258. ISBN 978-0-7425-1950-3. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  22. ^ Jannazzo, Antonio (2003). Il liberalismo italiano del Novecento: da Giolitti a Malagodi. Rubbettino Editore. p. 43.
  23. ^ a b Günter Trautmann (1984). "Entpolitisierung und demographischer Machtwechsel in den politischen Systemen Frankreichs und Italiens seit 1972/73". In Jürgen W. Falter; Christian Fenner; Michael Th. Greven (eds.). Politische Willensbildung und lnteressenvermittlung. p. 185. doi:10.1007/978-3-663-14338-3. ISBN 978-3-663-14338-3.
  24. ^ "Morto Valerio Zanone, dal Pli all'Ulivo: Fu ministro e sindaco di Torino". 7 January 2016.
  25. ^ "Zanone dai liberali al governo, storia di un torinese col senso dello Stato". 7 January 2016.
  26. ^ "Il leader liberale Valerio Zanone è morto - ItaliaOggi.it". Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  27. ^ Helmut Drüke (2013). Italien: Grundwissen-Länderkunden: Politik — Gesellschaft — Wirtschaft. Springer-Verlag. p. 153f. ISBN 9783322955227.
  28. ^ Michael Sommer (2002). "Im Süden nichts Neues: Zur aktuellen Entwicklung des italienischen Parteiensystems" (PDF). Politische Vierteljahresschrift. Westdeutscher Verlag. p. 115.
  29. ^ Piergiorgio Corbetta; Maria Serena Piretti, Atlante storico-elettorale d'Italia, Zanichelli, Bologna 2009
  30. ^ a b "Eligendo Archivio - Ministero dell'Interno DAIT". Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  31. ^ Result of the National Democratic Union coalition with the Labour Democratic Party.
  32. ^ Result of the National Bloc coalition with the Common Man's Front.
  33. ^ Result of the National Bloc coalition with the Common Man's Front and Independents; plus non-partisan candidates.

italian, liberal, party, modern, party, with, same, name, 1997, italian, partito, liberale, italiano, liberal, political, party, italy, partito, liberale, italianoabbreviationplileadersgiovanni, giolittiluigi, factabenedetto, croceluigi, einaudienrico, nicolam. For the modern day party with the same name see Italian Liberal Party 1997 The Italian Liberal Party Italian Partito Liberale Italiano PLI was a liberal political party in Italy Italian Liberal Party Partito Liberale ItalianoAbbreviationPLILeadersGiovanni GiolittiLuigi FactaBenedetto CroceLuigi EinaudiEnrico De NicolaManlio BrosioBruno VillabrunaGaetano MartinoGiovanni MalagodiValerio ZanoneAlfredo BiondiRenato AltissimoRaffaele CostaFounded8 October 1922Dissolved6 February 1994Preceded byLiberal UnionSucceeded byFederation of Liberals 1 legal successor Union of the Centre 1 split NewspaperL OpinioneYouth wingItalian Liberal YouthMembership 1958 173 722 max 2 IdeologyLiberalism Italian Political positionCentre rightNational affiliationNational Bloc 1922 24 National List 1924 26 CLN 1943 47 UDN 1946 48 National Bloc 1948 49 Centrism 1947 58 Pentapartito 3 1980 91 Quadripartito 1991 94 European affiliationELDR PartyInternational affiliationLiberal InternationalEuropean Parliament groupELDR GroupColours BluePolitics of ItalyPolitical partiesElectionsThe PLI which is the heir of the liberal currents of both the Historical Right and the Historical Left was a minor party after World War II but also a frequent junior party in government especially since 1979 It originally represented the right wing of the Italian liberal movement while the Italian Republican Party the left wing The PLI disintegrated in 1994 following the fallout of the Tangentopoli corruption scandal and was succeeded by several minor parties The party s most influential leaders were Giovanni Giolitti Benedetto Croce and Giovanni Malagodi Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 The brief party 1 3 Post World War II 1 4 Giovanni Malagodi 1 5 The Pentapartito 1 6 Dissolution and diaspora 1 7 Re foundation 2 Ideology position factions 3 Popular support 4 Electoral results 4 1 Italian Parliament 4 2 European Parliament 4 3 Regional elections 5 Leadership 6 Symbols 7 ReferencesHistory EditOrigins Edit See also Liberalism and radicalism in Italy The origins of liberalism in Italy are with the Historical Right a parliamentary group formed by Camillo Benso di Cavour in the Parliament of the Kingdom of Sardinia following the 1848 revolution The group was moderately conservative and supported centralised government restricted suffrage regressive taxation and free trade They dominated Italian politics following the country s unification in 1861 but never formed a party The Liberals were indeed a loose coalition of local leaders whose sources of strength were census suffrage and the first past the post voting system The Right was opposed by its more progressive counterpart the Historical Left which overthrew Marco Minghetti s government during the so called parliamentary revolution of 1876 which brought Agostino Depretis to become Prime Minister However Depretis immediately began to look for support among Rightists MPs who readily changed their positions in a context of widespread corruption This phenomenon known in Italian as trasformismo roughly translatable in English as transformism in a satirical newspaper the PM was depicted as a chameleon effectively removed political differences in Parliament which was dominated by an undistinguished liberal bloc with a landslide majority until World War I Two liberal parliamentary factions alternated in government a conservative one led by Sidney Sonnino and a progressive one led by Giovanni Giolitti who started as a member of the Historical Left and served as Prime Minister in 1982 1983 1903 1905 1906 1909 1911 1914 and 1920 1921 Giolitti whose faction was by far the largest sought to unify the liberal establishment into a united party the Liberal Union in 1913 also with the participation of Sonnino The Liberals governed in alliance with the Radicals the Democrats and eventually the Reformist Socialists 4 The brief party Edit Giovanni Giolitti five time Prime Minister of Italy 1892 1921 At the end of World War I universal suffrage and proportional representation were introduced These reforms caused big problems to the Liberals who found themselves unable to stop the rise of two mass parties the Italian Socialist Party PSI and the Italian People s Party PPI which had taken the control of many local authorities in northern Italy even before the war Through the Christian democratic PPI Catholics who were long inactive due to the trauma of the capture of Rome and the struggles between the Holy See and the Italian state started to be involved in politics in opposition to both the PSI and the liberal establishment which had governed the country for virtually sixty years The Parliament was thus fundamentally divided in three different blocs and fragmentation brought about instability with the Socialists and the rising Fascist instigators of political violence on opposite sides In this chaotic situation in 1922 the Liberals re grouped within the Italian Liberal Party PLI which immediately joined an alliance led by the National Fascist Party and formed with it a joint list for the 1924 general election transforming the Fascists from a small political force into an absolute majority party The PLI which failed to subdue the Fascists was banned by Benito Mussolini in 1926 along with all the other parties while many old Liberal politicians were given prestigious but not influential political posts such as seats in the Senate which was stripped of any real power by the Fascist reforms Post World War II Edit Luigi Einaudi President of Italy from 1948 to 1955The PLI was re established in 1943 by Benedetto Croce a prominent intellectual and senator whose international recognition and parliamentary membership allowed him to remain a free man during the Fascist regime despite being an anti fascist himself and joined the National Liberation Committee After the end of World War II Enrico De Nicola a Liberal became provisional Head of State and another one Luigi Einaudi who as Minister of Economy and Governor of the Bank of Italy between 1945 and 1948 had reshaped Italian economy succeeded him as President of Italy In the 1946 general election the PLI as part of the National Democratic Union won 6 8 of the vote which was somewhat below expectations for a coalition representing the pre Fascist political establishment Indeed the Union was supported by all the survivors of the Italian political class before the rise of Fascism from Vittorio Emanuele Orlando to Radical Francesco Saverio Nitti In its first years the PLI was home to very different ideological factions and for instance it was successively led by Leone Cattani a representative of the internal left and then by Roberto Lucifero a monarchist conservative In 1948 Bruno Villabruna a moderate was elected secretary and sought to re unite all the Liberals under the party also Cattani who had left the party after Lucifero s election returned into the fold Giovanni Malagodi Edit Giovanni Malagodi leader from 1954 to 1972In Giovanni Malagodi the PLI found a consequential leader Under his 18 years at the head Malagodi moved the party further to the right on economic issues This caused in 1956 the exit of the party s left wing including Cattani Villabruna Eugenio Scalfari and Marco Pannella who established the Radical Party In particular the PLI opposed the new centre left coalition which also included the Italian Socialist Party and presented itself as the main conservative party in Italy Malagodi managed to draw some votes from the Italian Social Movement the Monarchist National Party and especially Christian Democracy whose electoral base was mainly composed of conservatives suspicious of the Socialists increasing the party s share to a historical record of 7 0 in the 1963 general election After Malagodi s resignation from the party s leadership the PLI was defeated with a humiliating 1 3 in the 1976 general election but tried to re gain strength by repositioning in the political centre and supporting social reforms supported by the Radicals such as divorce The Pentapartito Edit After Valerio Zanone took over as party secretary in 1976 the PLI adopted a more centrist and to some extent social liberal approach The new secretary opened to the Socialists hoping to put in action a sort of lib lab cooperation similar to the Lib Lab pact experimented in the United Kingdom from 1977 to 1979 between the Labour Party and the Liberals In 1983 the PLI finally joined the Pentapartito coalition composed also of the Christian Democracy DC the Italian Socialist Party PSI the Italian Democratic Socialist Party PSDI and the Italian Republican Party PRI In the 1980s the party was led by Renato Altissimo and Alfredo Biondi In 1992 1994 the Italian party system was shaken by the uncovering of the corruption system nicknamed Tangentopoli by the Mani pulite investigation In the first months the PLI seemed immune to investigation However as the investigations further unravelled the party turned out to be part of the corruption scheme along with its coalition partners Francesco De Lorenzo the Liberal Minister of Health was one of the most loathed politicians in Italy for his corruption that involved stealing funds from the sick and allowing commercialisation of medicines based on bribes Dissolution and diaspora Edit The party was disbanded on 6 February 1994 and at least four heirs tried to take its legacy the Federation of Liberals FdL led by Raffaello Morelli and Valerio Zanone the official successor party first joined the Patto Segni then The Olive Tree the Union of the Centre UdC led by Alfredo Biondi Raffaele Costa and Enrico Nan was an associate party of Forza Italia FI and was merged into it in 1998 other Liberals including Antonio Martino Giuliano Urbani Giancarlo Galan and Paolo Romani directly joined FI the Liberal Left SL of Gianfranco Passalacqua representing the party s left wingers was finally merged into the Democrats of the Left in 2006 the Italian Liberal Right DLI led by Gabriele Pagliuzzi and Giuseppe Basini joined National Alliance AN In a few years after 1994 most Liberals migrated to FI while others joined the centre left coalition especially Democracy is Freedom The Daisy DL Re foundation Edit Main article Italian Liberal Party 1997 The party was re founded in 1997 by Stefano De Luca and re took its original name in 2004 The new PLI gathered some of the former right wing Liberals but soon distanced itself from the centre right coalition led by FI to follow an autonomous path and try to unite all the Liberals from left to right in a single party Ideology position factions EditThe party s ideological tradition was liberalism 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 including different variants and factions Indeed as the party was at times the bulwark of secular conservatism and monarchism it has been variously described as classical liberal 11 12 conservative liberal 13 liberist 8 11 14 meaning economically liberal and or right libertarian liberal conservative 15 16 and conservative 17 18 19 The party s political position has been usually described as centre right 20 21 and to the right of Christian Democracy but sometimes also centrist 22 23 The party always included more progressive factions chiefly including the one that broke away to form the Radical Party in 1956 and under the leadership of Valerio Zanone it arguably became a centre left party while under Giovanni Malagodi the PLI refused any cooperation with the Italian Socialist Party under Zanone and the lib lab pact the party became a close ally of the Socialists 24 25 26 Additionally it held laicist positions more similar to the other two centrist parties in the Pentapartito Italian Republican Party and Italian Democratic Socialist Party 23 27 28 Popular support EditBefore World Wars the Liberals constituted the political establishment that governed Italy for decades They had their main bases in Piedmont where many leading liberal politicians of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the Kingdom of Italy came from and southern Italy The Liberals never gained large support after World War II as they were not able to become a mass party and were replaced by Christian Democracy DC as the dominant political force In the 1946 general election the first after the war the PLI gained 6 8 as part of the National Democratic Union At that time they were strong especially in the South as DC was mainly rooted in the North 21 0 in Campania 22 8 in Basilicata 10 4 in Apulia 12 8 in Calabria and 13 6 in Sicily 29 However the party soon found its main constituency in the industrial elites of the industrial triangle formed by the metropolitan areas of Turin Milan and Genoa The PLI had its best results in the 1960s when it was rewarded by conservative voters for its opposition to the participation of the Italian Socialist Party PSI in government The party won 7 0 of the vote in 1963 15 2 in Turin 18 7 in Milan and 11 5 in Genoa and 5 8 in 1968 The PLI suffered a decline in the 1970s and settled around 2 3 in the 1980s when its strongholds were reduced to Piedmont especially the provinces of Turin and Cuneo and to a minor extent western Lombardy Liguria and Sicily 30 By the end of the 1980s similarly to the other parties of the Pentapartito coalition Christian Democrats Socialists Republicans and Democratic Socialists the Liberals strengthened their grip on the South while in the North they lost some of their residual votes to Lega Nord In the 1992 general election the last before the Tangentopoli scandals the PLI won 2 9 of the vote largely thanks to the increase of votes from the South 30 After the end of the First Republic former Liberals were very influential within Forza Italia FI in Piedmont Liguria and strangely enough in Veneto where a former Liberal Giancarlo Galan was three times elected president The electoral results of the PLI in general Chamber of Deputies and European Parliament elections since 1913 are shown in the chart below Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Electoral results EditItalian Parliament Edit Chamber of DeputiesElection year Votes Seats Leader1919 490 384 5th 8 6 41 508 Giovanni Giolitti1921 470 605 5th 7 1 43 535 3 Luigi Facta1924 233 521 6th 3 3 15 535 28 Luigi Facta1929 Banned 0 535 15 1934 Banned 0 535 1946 1 560 638 4th 31 6 8 31 535 31 Benedetto Croce1948 1 003 727 4th 32 3 8 14 574 17 Roberto Lucifero1953 815 929 7th 3 0 13 590 1 Bruno Villabruna1958 1 047 081 6th 3 5 17 596 4 Giovanni Malagodi1963 2 144 270 4th 7 0 39 630 22 Giovanni Malagodi1968 1 850 650 4th 5 8 31 630 8 Giovanni Malagodi1972 1 300 439 6th 3 9 20 630 11 Giovanni Malagodi1976 480 122 8th 1 3 5 630 15 Valerio Zanone1979 712 646 8th 1 9 9 630 4 Valerio Zanone1983 1 066 980 7th 2 9 16 630 7 Valerio Zanone1987 809 946 9th 2 1 11 630 5 Renato Altissimo1992 1 121 264 8th 2 9 17 630 6 Renato AltissimoSenate of the RepublicElection year Votes Seats Leader1948 1 222 419 4th 33 5 4 7 237 7 Roberto Lucifero1953 695 816 7th 2 9 3 237 5 Bruno Villabruna1958 1 012 610 6th 3 9 4 246 1 Giovanni Malagodi1963 2 043 323 4th 7 4 18 315 14 Giovanni Malagodi1968 1 943 795 4th 6 8 16 315 2 Giovanni Malagodi1972 1 319 175 6th 4 4 8 315 8 Giovanni Malagodi1976 438 265 8th 1 4 2 315 6 Valerio Zanone1979 691 718 8th 2 2 2 315 Valerio Zanone1983 834 771 7th 2 7 6 315 4 Valerio Zanone1987 700 330 9th 2 2 3 315 3 Renato Altissimo1992 939 159 8th 2 8 4 315 1 Renato AltissimoEuropean Parliament Edit European ParliamentElection year Votes Seats Leader1979 1 271 159 7th 3 6 3 81 Valerio Zanone1984 2 140 501 5th a 6 1 3 81 Valerio Zanone1989 1 532 388 5th b 4 4 0 81 3 Renato Altissimo Jointly with the PRI Jointly with the PRI and Marco Pannella Regional elections Edit Regions of ItalyElection year Votes Seats Leader1970 1 290 715 6th 4 8 27 720 Giovanni Malagodi1975 749 821 7th 2 5 11 720 16 Valerio Zanone1980 816 418 7th 2 7 15 720 4 Valerio Zanone1985 702 273 7th 2 2 13 720 2 Valerio Zanone1990 630 242 9th 2 0 13 720 Renato AltissimoLeadership EditSecretary Alberto Giovannini 1922 1924 Quintino Piras 1924 1926 Giovanni Cassandro 1944 Manlio Brosio 1944 1945 Leone Cattani 1945 1946 Giovanni Cassandro 1946 1947 Roberto Lucifero 1947 1948 Bruno Villabruna 1948 1954 Alessandro Leone di Tavagnasco 1954 Giovanni Malagodi 1954 1972 Agostino Bignardi 1972 1976 Valerio Zanone 1976 1985 Alfredo Biondi 1985 1986 Renato Altissimo 1986 1993 Raffaele Costa 1993 1994 President Emilio Borzino 1922 1925 Benedetto Croce 1944 1947 Raffaele De Caro 1947 1961 Gaetano Martino 1961 1967 Vittorio Badini Confalonieri 1967 1972 Giovanni Malagodi 1972 1976 Agostino Bignardi 1976 1979 Aldo Bozzi 1979 1987 Salvatore Valitutti 1988 1991 Valerio Zanone 1991 1993 Alfredo Biondi 1993 1994 Party Leader in the Chamber of Deputies Vittorio Emanuele Orlando 1946 Luigi Einaudi 1946 Francesco Saverio Nitti 1946 1947 Epicarmo Corbino 1947 1948 Raffaele De Caro 1948 1961 Giovanni Malagodi 1961 1971 Aldo Bozzi 1971 1987 Paolo Battistuzzi 1987 1993 Savino Melillo 1993 1994 Symbols Edit 1922 1926 1944 1949 1949 1979 1979 1994References Edit a b Luciano Bardi Piero Ignazi 1998 The Italian Party System The Effective Magnitude of an Earthquake In Piero Ignazi Colette Ysmal eds The Organization of Political Parties in Southern Europe Greenwood Publishing Group p 102 ISBN 978 0 275 95612 7 Archived copy Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link la Repubblica storia d Italia dal 45 ad oggi II Pentapartito 1979 1992 www storiaxxisecolo it Retrieved 4 April 2023 Italian Liberal Party Archived 21 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine Britannica Concise James L Newell 2010 The Politics of Italy Governance in a Normal Country Cambridge University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 521 84070 5 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Maurizio Cotta Luca Verzichelli 2007 Political Institutions in Italy Oxford University Press p 38 ISBN 978 0 19 928470 2 Retrieved 17 July 2013 Forte Francesco Marchionatti Roberto 2012 Luigi Einaudi s economics of liberalism The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 19 4 587 624 doi 10 1080 09672567 2010 540346 hdl 2318 90412 S2CID 154450408 a b Einaudi Luigi Liberismo e Liberalismo Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2014 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 8 July 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Luigi Einaudi Guida alla lettura Antologia degli scritti Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b c Liberalismo liberismo e antistatalismo 8 February 2012 Mario Cannella Alexey Makarin Ricardo Pique March 2021 The Political Legacy of Nazi Annexation PDF p 11 Retrieved 29 October 2021 Michael Steed Peter Humphreys 1988 Identifying Liberal Parties In Emil J Kirchner ed Liberal Parties in Western Europe p 409 ISBN 978 0 52 132394 9 IL PLI RIPARTE DAL POLO LAICO la Repubblica 20 December 1988 Emil J Kirchner 1988 Liberal Parties in Western Europe p 453 ISBN 9780521323949 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Oscar W Gabriel Frank Brettschneider eds 2013 Politische Konflikte Willensbildung und Verhalten Die EU Staaten im Vergleich Strukturen Prozesse Politikinhalte Springer Verlag p 254 ISBN 9783322924889 Linda Basile 2018 The Party Politics of Decentralization The Territorial Dimension in Italian Party Agendas Springer p 189 ISBN 978 3 319 75853 4 Tom Lansford ed 2013 Political Handbook of the World 2013 SAGE Publications p 714 ISBN 978 1 4522 5825 6 Raffaella Y Nanetti Robert Leonardi 2014 Italy In M Donald Hancock Christopher J Carman Marjorie Castle David P Conradt Raffaella Y Nanetti Robert Leonardi William Safran Stephen White eds Politics in Europe CQ Press p 363 ISBN 978 1 4833 2305 3 Jones Erik Pasquino Gianfranco 2015 The Oxford Handbook of Italian Politics Oxford University Press p 456 Cinzia Padovani 2007 A Fatal Attraction Public Television and Politics in Italy Rowman amp Littlefield p 258 ISBN 978 0 7425 1950 3 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Jannazzo Antonio 2003 Il liberalismo italiano del Novecento da Giolitti a Malagodi Rubbettino Editore p 43 a b Gunter Trautmann 1984 Entpolitisierung und demographischer Machtwechsel in den politischen Systemen Frankreichs und Italiens seit 1972 73 In Jurgen W Falter Christian Fenner Michael Th Greven eds Politische Willensbildung und lnteressenvermittlung p 185 doi 10 1007 978 3 663 14338 3 ISBN 978 3 663 14338 3 Morto Valerio Zanone dal Pli all Ulivo Fu ministro e sindaco di Torino 7 January 2016 Zanone dai liberali al governo storia di un torinese col senso dello Stato 7 January 2016 Il leader liberale Valerio Zanone e morto ItaliaOggi it Retrieved 4 April 2023 Helmut Druke 2013 Italien Grundwissen Landerkunden Politik Gesellschaft Wirtschaft Springer Verlag p 153f ISBN 9783322955227 Michael Sommer 2002 Im Suden nichts Neues Zur aktuellen Entwicklung des italienischen Parteiensystems PDF Politische Vierteljahresschrift Westdeutscher Verlag p 115 Piergiorgio Corbetta Maria Serena Piretti Atlante storico elettorale d Italia Zanichelli Bologna 2009 a b Eligendo Archivio Ministero dell Interno DAIT Retrieved 4 April 2023 Result of the National Democratic Union coalition with the Labour Democratic Party Result of the National Bloc coalition with the Common Man s Front Result of the National Bloc coalition with the Common Man s Front and Independents plus non partisan candidates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italian Liberal Party amp oldid 1161774037, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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