Fascist National Party

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Fascist National Party
Partito Nazionale Fascista
Former Italian National Party
Political ideology Fascism
Official Newspaper Il Popolo d'Italia
Website N/A
See also Politics of Italy

Political parties in Italy
Elections in Italy

The Fascist National Party (Partito Nazionale Fascista; PNF) was an Italian party, created by Benito Mussolini as the political expression of Fascism (previously represented by groups known as Fasci; see also Italian fascism).

It is currently the only party whose reformation is explicitly banned by the Constitution of Italy.

[edit] History

Founded in Rome on November 7, 1921, it marked the transformation of the paramilitary Fasci Italiani di Combattimento into a more coherent political group (the Fasci di Combattimento had been founded by Mussolini in Milan's Piazza San Sepolcro, on March 23, 1919).

The PNF was instrumental in directing and popularizing support for Mussolini's ideology. It was the main agent of the coup d'état attempted as the October 28, 1922 March on Rome (although a parallel agreement between Mussolini and King Victor Emmanuel III was arguably more important).

After the drastic modifying of electoral legislation (the Acerbo Law), the PNF clearly won the highly controversial elections of April 1924. Legislation passed in 1928 made it the only legal party of the country, a situation which lasted until 1943.

The party was dissolved upon the arrest of Mussolini after the coup inside the Grand Fascist Council, led by Dino Grandi on July 24 1943. It was officially banned by Pietro Badoglio's government on July 27.

After the Nazi-engineered Unternehmen Eiche liberated Mussolini in September, the PNF was revived as the Republican Fascist Party (Partito Fascista Repubblicano - PFR; September 13), as the single party of the Northern and Nazi-protected Italian Social Republic (the Salò Republic). Its secretary was Alessandro Pavolini. The PFR did not outlast Mussolini's execution and the disappearance of the Salò state in April 1945.

[edit] Secretaries of the PNF

  • Michele Bianchi (November 1921 - January 1923)
  • multiple presidency (January 1923 - October 1923)
Triumvirate: Michele Bianchi, Nicola Sansanelli, Giuseppe Bastianini
  • Francesco Giunta (October 15 1923 - April 22 1924)
  • multiple presidency (April 23 1924 - February 15 1925)
Quattuorvirate: Roberto Forges Davanzati, Cesare Rossi, Giovanni Marinelli, Alessandro Melchiorri

 

Historical Italian political parties (active parties: simple version, complete version)

Communist: Communist Party of Italy, Italian Communist Party, Marxist-Leninist Revolutionary Party of Italy, Union of Italian Communists (Marxist-Leninist), Proletarian Unity Party, Organisation of Communists of Italy (Marxist-Leninists), Movement of Unitarian Communists, Popular Democracy (United Left)
Socialist and social-democratic: Italian Socialist Party, Italian Reform Socialist Party, United Socialist Party (1922), Labour Democratic Party, Italian Socialist Workers' Party, United Socialist Party (1949), Italian Democratic Socialist Party, Unified Socialist Party, Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity, Democratic Party of the Left, Movement for Democracy – The Net, Italian Socialists, Socialist League, Reform Socialist Party, Social Christians, Socialist Party, Socialist Unity
Green: Rainbow Greens
Social liberal: Action Party, Radical Party, Democratic Alliance, Democratic Union, The Democrats
Liberal: Italian Liberal Party, Uomo Qualunque Front, Centre Union, Liberal Party
Centrist: Patto Segni, Italian Renewal
Regionalist: Fronte Marco Polo
Christian democratic: Italian People's Party (1919), Christian Democracy, Italian People's Party (1994), Christian Democratic Centre, United Christian Democrats, Christian Democrats for the Republic, Democratic Union for the Republic, European Democracy
Conservative: Monarchist National Party, People's Monarchist Party, Italian Democratic Party of Monarchist Unity, National Democracy
Fascist and neo-fascist: Fascist National Party, Italian Social Movement, National Vanguard, National Front


Leftist coalition: Popular Democratic Front, Proletarian Democracy, Alliance of Progressives, Socialists United for Europe, New Country, The Sunflower, Together with the Union
Liberal coalition: National Democratic Union, National Bloc
Christian democratic coalition: Pact for Italy, Whiteflower
Centre-right coalition: Pole of Freedoms, Pole of Good Government, Pole for Freedoms, Abolition of Deduction
Conservative coalition: National Bloc of Freedom