请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Tricolour Flame
释义

  1. History

  2. Ideology

  3. Membership

  4. Election results

  5. Leadership

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. External links

{{Infobox political party
| name = Tricolour Flame
| native_name = Fiamma Tricolore
| logo = FIAMMA TRICOLORE - 5.gif
| logo_size = 180px
| leader =
| leader1_title = Secretary
| leader1_name = Attilio Carelli
| leader2_title = President
| leader2_name = Francesco Condorelli
| leader3_title = Honorary President
| leader3_name = Alessandro Bordoni
| foundation = 27 January 1995
| predecessor = Italian Social Movement
| dissolution =
| headquarters = via Roccaporena, 51 - Roma
| newspaper =
| membership_year= 2005
| membership = 5,000
| ideology = Ultranationalism
Fascism
Third Position
| position = Far-right
| national =
| international =
| european = Alliance of European National Movements
| europarl =
| seats1_title = Chamber of Deputies
| seats1 = {{Composition bar|0|630|hex=black}}
| seats2_title = Senate
| seats2 = {{Composition bar|0|315|hex=black}}
| seats3_title = European Parliament
| seats3 = {{Composition bar|0|73|hex=black}}
| website = www.fiammatricolore.com
| colorcode = {{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}
| country = Italy
}}

The Social Movement – Tricolour Flame ({{lang-it|Movimento Sociale – Fiamma Tricolore}}, MS-FT), commonly known as Tricolour Flame (Fiamma Tricolore), is a neo-fascist[1] political party in Italy.

History

The party was started by the more radical members of the Fascist Italian Social Movement, led by Pino Rauti, who refused to join the mainstream conservative party National Alliance. Rauti was later ousted by Luca Romagnoli, who took the leadership.

In the 2004 European Parliamentary Election the party gained enough votes in the Southern constituency to elect Luca Romagnoli to the European Parliament. The party was then a member of the House of Freedoms coalition for the 2006 general election.

In the coming of the 2008 general election, Tricolour Flame formed a joint list called The Right–Tricolour Flame with The Right of Francesco Storace, a splinter group of National Alliance, in support of the candidacy of Daniela Santanchè for Prime Minister.

On 8 November 2013, Luca Romagnoli, secretary of Tricolour Flame, together with the secretary of The Right Francesco Storace, the regent of Future and Freedom Roberto Menia, the leader of I the South Adriana Poli Bortone, Domenico Nania of the association New Alliance, Oreste Tofani of the association Nazione Sovrana, Antonio Buonfiglio of the association Il Popolo della Vita and Roberto Buonasorte, editor of the online newspaper Il Giornale d'Italia, founded the Movement for National Alliance, a federation of right movements inspired to National Alliance.

On 9 December 2013 the Central Committee of Tricolour Flame distrusted Luca Romagnoli, because he joined this initiative without having preventively sought the opinion of the same Committee, and Attilio Carelli became regent Secretary of the party. After the expulsion Romagnoli founded instead his new political movement, Social Right.[2]

On 13 and 14 December 2014, the VII National Congress officially appointed Carelli as Secretary of the party.

For the 2018 general election, it formed the Italy for the Italians coalition along with the New Force party.

Ideology

Tricolour Flame is the party of the Italian far-right most closely tied to the legacy of Italian Social Republic (RSI). The RSI is usually seen by the party as the example of what Fascism should have been, in particular as an example of true welfare state. As a sign of this legacy, the party, for example, guarantees free membership for ex-RSI military.[3] A press release from the Rome section of the party states:

{{cquote|Tricolour Flame is a movement born just to remark its own ideal proximity to the Social Republic and its fighters. A Republic on which side we would surely have fought, if only the fate would have let us born these years. And we should have surely fought to win, because for us the political synthesis originated from the thought of Benito Mussolini is for us the only political, economical and spiritual system able to bring the freedom and social justice that are today denied to Italians and all other world populations. [...] [We] relaunch our battle for a better tomorrow, embodying the ideals of the Black Shirts of Alessandro Pavolini.[4]}}

Tricolour Flame maintains a fairly strong anti-capitalist stance, and it can be thought to be the Italian party closest to third positionist ideology.

Recently Tricolour Flame has been peculiar, among Italian neo-fascist organizations, in actively trying to attract the young masses and renewing its political practices and communication techniques in a more modern, innovative fashion. Political manifests often tend towards attractive, modern graphics and clear-cut, even humorous slogans. Tricolour Flame is also very close to youth far-right organizations and initiatives, of which the most relevant is CasaPound, a social centre in Rome.

The party is against the regionalism promoted by the Northern League for an independent "Padania", instead favoring a united Italy.

Membership

Among the more controversial members of Tricolur Flame are Pietro Puschiavo and Maurizio Boccacci.[5] In 1985 Puschiavo was a founding member of the Veneto Skinheads Front, a far-right skinhead group based in Veneto and connected to Blood and Honour. Boccacci is the former leader of the Western Political Movement, a far-right skinhead organization based in Rome.[6]

Election results

Chamber of Deputies
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
1996 339,351 0.910|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Pino Rauti
2001 143,963 0.390|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Pino Rauti
2006 230,506 0.600|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2008into The Right–Tricolour Flame0|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2013 44,753 0.13 (#22)0|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2018into Italy for the Italians0|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Attilio Carelli
Senate of the Republic
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
1996 747,487 2.291|315|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Pino Rauti
2001 340,221 1.000|315|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
{{decrease}} 1
Pino Rauti
2006 204,498 0.600|315|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2008into The Right–Tricolour Flame0|315|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2013 52,106 (#21) 0.170|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2018into Italy for the Italians0|630|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Attilio Carelli
European Parliament
Election year # of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/– Leader
1999 496,030 (#15) 1.601|87|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Pino Rauti
2004 237,058 (#15) 0.731|78|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Luca Romagnoli
2009 246,403 (#10) 0.800|72|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
{{decrease}} 1
Luca Romagnoli
2014 did not run
0|72|hex={{Tricolour Flame/meta/color}}}}
Attilio Carelli

Leadership

  • Secretary: Pino Rauti (1995–2002), Luca Romagnoli (2002–2013), Attilio Carelli (2013–present)
  • President: Romolo Sabatini (1995–2000), Stelvio Dal Piaz (2000–2002), Pino Rauti (2002–2004), Rocco Tauro (2004–2013), Attilio Carelli (2013–2014), Francesco Condorelli (2014–present)
  • Honorary President: Manlio Sargenti (1995–2001), Alessandro Bordoni (2013–present)

See also

  • New Force

References

1. ^{{cite book|author1=Maurizio Cotta|author2=Luca Verzichelli|title=Political Institutions in Italy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G-FAZHBDqggC&pg=PA40|accessdate=16 July 2013|year=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-928470-2|pages=40–}}
2. ^Al via la Destra sociale di Romagnoli
3. ^:: Fiamma Tricolore :: Sito ufficiale :: Appuntamenti
4. ^Fiamma Tricolore Roma
5. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20050607045606/http://www.fiammatricolore.net/organigramma.htm]
6. ^Stephen Roth Institute: Antisemitism And Racism {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629110430/http://www.tau.ac.il/Anti-Semitism/asw97-8/italy.html |date=2011-06-29 }}

External links

  • Official website
  • [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imeFCcyT6q4 Footage of a Tricolur Flame rally in Rome]
{{Italian Nationalist political parties}}{{Political parties of Italy}}{{Alliance of European National Movements}}

9 : 1995 establishments in Italy|Political parties established in 1995|Neo-fascist organisations in Italy|Euronat members|Third Position|Far-right politics in Italy|Right-wing populism in Europe|Eurosceptic parties in Italy|Nationalist parties in Italy

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/29 18:19:16