Rose in the Fist

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Rose in the Fist
Founded 17 November 2005
Dissolved 18 December 2007
Membership  unknown
Ideology Social liberalism, Social democracy, Laicism, Third Way


The Rose in the Fist (Rosa nel Pugno, RnP) was an Italian political federation of parties founded in 17 November 2005 and was disbanded during 2007. On 18 December 2007 the parliamentary group of the federation in the Chamber of Deputies changed its name from "Rose in the Fist" to "Socialists and Radicals – RnP".

Its members were the Italian Democratic Socialists (led by Enrico Boselli and Roberto Villetti, the Italian Radicals (led by Marco Pannella and Emma Bonino) and some independent members gathered in the Association for the Rose in the Fist (Lanfranco Turci, Salvatore Buglio, Biagio De Giovanni, Luciano Cafagna, etc.), whereas the left-wing of the New Italian Socialist Party (NPSI) showed some interest in joining this federation. Some members of NPSI actually left their party in order to adhere to RnP: the Reformist Socialists of Donato Robilotta.

RnP was part of the centre-left coalition of parties The Union and was one of the main Italian supporters of gay rights, abortion and euthanasia.

[edit] History

The federation was constituted in September 2005, during a convention held in Fiuggi, based on the political principles of José Luis Zapatero (not about foreign policy, where Radicals have a pro-American stance), Tony Blair and Loris Fortuna. In November, its official definition was finally announced, and the symbol presented, recalling the current one of Socialist International, and the historical logo of the Italian Radicals during the 1970s and the 1980s, but also the current one of the Italian Democratic Socialists, that being a red rose.

The Radical component of the alliance createsd some friction with the more Roman Catholic components of The Union, such as Democracy is Freedom – Daisy and UDEUR Populars. The Socialist component was made up mostly of veterans of the Italian Socialist Party, who had some problems with former anti-corruption prosecutor Antonio Di Pietro (who caused the demise of their former party with his investigations during Mani Pulite) and his movement Italy of Values. There was also the so-called "third component", composed mainly by ex-Democrats of the Left, as Lanfranco Turci, Salvatore Buglio, Biagio De Giovanni and Luciano Cafagna, now gathered in the Association for the Rose in the Fist.

[edit] Popular support

The federation presented its own lists for the 2006 general election, obtaining 2.6% of votes, and winning 18 seats (9 for SDI, 7 for the Radicals, one for Lanfranco Turci and one for Salvatore Buglio) in the Chamber of Deputies and no seats in the Senate.

This was not an encouraging result, indeed a bad one, considering that the Radicals alone scored 2.3% both at the 2001 general election and at the 2004 European Parliament election, while the Socialists have an electoral force of 2-3% in regional and local elections.

In particular, it seems that the Radicals lost votes to Forza Italia in their Northern strongholds (as Piedmont, Lombardy, Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia), while the Socialists did the same in favour of the Olive Tree coalition in their Southern strongholds (as Abruzzo, Campania, Apulia, Basilicata and Calabria). The table below shows how the two parties were not able to secure the favor of their usual voters, so that the Rose in the Fist scored less than Radicals alone in the North and the Socialists alone in the South.

Rad 2004 SDI 2005 Rad-SDI 2006
Piedmont 3.1 2.4 2.7
Lombardy 2.7 w. OliveTree 2.6
Veneto 2.8 w. OliveTree 2.3
Friuli VG 3.2 no election 2.7
Abruzzo 2.2 5.2 2.9
Campania 1.2 5.3 2.8
Apulia 1.7 4.0 3.1
Basilicata 1.5 w. OliveTree 3.8
Calabria 0.9 6.8 4.3

[edit] External links