Historical Right
Historical Right | |
---|---|
Destra Storica | |
Historical leaders |
Massimo d'Azeglio Camillo Benso di Cavour Bettino Ricasoli Alfonso La Marmora Federico Luigi Menabrea Giovanni Lanza Marco Minghetti Antonio Starabba di Rudinì |
Founded | 1861 |
Dissolved | 1913 |
Preceded by | Moderate Party |
Merged into | Liberals |
Headquarters | Palazzo Montecitorio, Rome |
Ideology |
Conservatism (Italy)[1] Internal factions: • Liberalism • Royalism • Laicism |
Political position | Right-wing |
Politics of Italy Political parties Elections |
The Historical Right (Italian: Destra Storica), officially known as The Right (Italian: La Destra) and somitemes called Liberal Constitutional Party (Italian: Partito Liberale Costituzionale, PLC),[2] was a conservative and royalist parliamentary group in Italy during the second half of the 19th century.[3] It was founded in 1849 under the Piedmontese government of Massimo d'Azeglio to distinguish the Cabinet coalition from its opposition, the Historical Left. It was not a structured party but simply a parliamentary group.
History
The Right was founded as a parliamentary group in the Piedmontese Parliament in 1861, under the premiership of Massimo D'Azeglio, as heir of the Sardinian Moderate Party.
The Historical Right, known as the heir of Count Cavour and the expression of the liberal bourgeoisie, won the Italian general elections from 1861 to 1874. Its members were mostly large landowners, industrialists and people related to the military, supporting free trade market and centralism. In foreign relations, their goal was the unification of Italy, primarily searching an alliance with the British Empire and the French Empire, but sometimes also with the German Empire against Austria.[4]
The Right dominated the political life in Italy until 1876, when the right-wing government of Marco Minghetti collapsed shortly after achieving the budget parity. The overthrown of Minghetti's government was called "Parliamentary Revolution". 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 after World War I.
Ideology and factions
Initially, The Right was the expression of the conservatism and the upper class, like urban bourgeoisie, industrialists, landowners, militaries and some noble families. The Right also supported a free market and the centralisation (despite the federalist's purposes of Marco Minghetti). However, the party wasn't never appreciated by the middle class, for the high taxation's policies, above all on the wheat. The Right also launch authoritarian tendecies, with the prohibition of strikes and protests and lounched a war against the banditry in the Southern Italy. During the last mid of 1800s, the party lost the power for his counterpart, "The Left", that started also conservative cabinets supported by The Right (that was moved to the hardly right-wing), giving life to the Trasformismo.
There were two factions in the Historical Right:
- The Permament Liberal Association (Italian: Associazione Liberale Permanente), commonly named Permanent, composed by the Sardinian-Piedmontese old liberal members, that supported free market and law and order policies. Its leaders were Quintino Sella and Giovanni Lanza.
- The Clique (Italian: Consorteria, as derogatoring nickname from the Piedmonteses), was a strong bloc that supported liberal conservative policies, composed mainly by Emilian-Romagnoli, Tuscans and Lombards with the support of the Southern politicians. Its notably members were Marco Minghetti, Bettino Ricasoli, Luigi Carlo Farini and Silvio Spaventa.
Electoral results
Chamber of Deputies | ||||||
Election year | # of overall votes |
% of overall vote |
# of overall seats won |
+/– | Leader | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1861 | unknown (#1) | 46.1 | 342 / 443 |
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1865 | unknown (#1) | 41.2 | 182 / 443 |
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1867 | 84,685 (#2) | 39.2 | 151 / 493 |
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1870 | 110,525 (#1) | 37.2 | 233 / 508 |
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1874 | 156,784 (#1) | 53.6 | 276 / 508 |
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1876 | 97,726 (#2) | 28.2 | 94 / 508 |
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1880 | 135,797 (#2) | 37.9 | 171 / 508 |
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1882 | unknown (#2) | 28.9 | 147 / 508 |
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1886 | unknown (#2) | 27.9 | 145 / 508 |
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1890 | unknown (#2) | 9.4 | 48 / 508 |
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1892 | unknown (#2) | 18.3 | 93 / 508 |
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1895 | 263,315 (#2) | 21.6 | 104 / 508 |
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1897 | unknown (#2) | 19.4 | 99 / 508 |
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1900 | 271,698 (#2) | 21.4 | 116 / 508 |
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1904 | 212,584 (#3) | 13.9 | 76 / 508 |
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1909 | 108,029 (#4) | 5.9 | 44 / 508 |
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References
- ↑ "Destra Storica Italiana". Treccani.
- ↑ La Stampa historical archive
- ↑ Nations and Nationalism: A Global Historical Overwiev
- ↑ Italy: a Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present
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