United Christian Democrats

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The United Christian Democrats is a late christian-democratic party of Italy.

[edit] History

It was born in 1995 by a split, led by Rocco Buttiglione (secretary of the Italian People's Party in 1994-95), Roberto Formigoni and Gianfranco Rotondi, of those members of the Italian People's Party who wanted to enter in alliance with Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia.

The party formed a joint list with Forza Italia in 1995 regional elections and Roberto Formigoni was elected president of Lombardy, while in 1996 it formed an alliance with the Christian Democratic Centre (CCD) for the general election, in which CCD-CDU scored 5.6%.

In June 1998, Buttiglione led the party into the Democratic Union for the Republic, a new chirstian-democratic outfit launched by Francesco Cossiga and Clemente Mastella, who had left CCD to form the Christian Democrats for the Republic (CDR). In October, when Buttiglione briefly decided to support the centre-left government of Massimo D'Alema, alongside with the rest of UDR, Roberto Formigoni and many regional councillors in Veneto, Lombardy and Piedmont left the party to join Forza Italia.

In February 1999, UDR split between those who supported Cossiga, who formed the Union for the Republic (UpR), and those who supported Mastella, who formed the Union of Democrats for Europe. Buttiglione re-established CDU as a separate party and started to get closer again to Berlusconi's centre-right.

In 1999 European Parliament elections, CDU scored 2.2% and elected two MEPs, while in 2001 it formed an alliance with CCD, as in 1996, gaining the 3.2%.

In 2002 the United Christian Democrats, the Christian Democratic Centre and European Democracy (DE) merged into the Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (UDC). Rocco Buttiglione was elected President of the new party.

[edit] Leadership

 

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

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