Difference between revisions of "Lega Nord"

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{{Infobox_Italy_Political_Party |
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{{X}}
  party_name    = Northern League |
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{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:250px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
  party_name_italian  = Lega Nord |
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|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
  party_logo    = [[Image:Lega nord.png|center|150px]] |
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| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#333333; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" |[[Image:Lega nord.png|center|130px]]
   party_status  = Regional Party of Northern Italy |
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|- style="color:#fff; background:darkred; font-size:larger;"
  leader = [[Umberto Bossi]] |
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! colspan=2 |'''Lega Nord'''
  coalition = [[House of Freedoms]] |
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|-
  newspaper = [http://www.lapadania.com La Padania] |
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|Party name Italian  || Lega Nord
  ideology = Regional [[autonomism]], [[Populism]] |
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|-
  website = [http://www.leganord.org http://www.leganord.org]
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|Party status   || Regional Party of Northern Italy  
}}
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|-
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|Leader ||[[Umberto Bossi]]  
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|-
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|Coalition || [[House of Freedoms]]  
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|-
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|Newspaper || [http://www.lapadania.com La Padania]  
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|-
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|Ideology || [[Regionalism (politics)|Regionalism]], [[Federalism]], [[Populism]]
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|-
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|International affiliation || ''none''
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|-
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|European affiliation || ''none''
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|-
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|European parliament group || [[Union for Europe of the Nations]]
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|-
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|Membership || 131,423 <small>(2003, [http://www.cattaneo.org/archivi/adele/iscritti.xls])</small>
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|-
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|Website || [http://www.leganord.org http://www.leganord.org]  
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|-
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|Color code || green
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|-
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|Foundation || [[February 15]], [[1991]]
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|-
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|Headquarters || Via Bellerio, 41<br />20161 Milan
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|}
  
The '''Northern League''' ([[Italian language|Italian]]: ''Lega Nord'') is an [[Italy|Italian]] [[political party]] that advocates [[autonomy]] for a part of Northern [[Italy]] they call [[Padania]] (see the article for usage of the name). It is a personality-driven party led by [[Umberto Bossi]].
 
  
== History ==
 
  
The party had its first successes in the late eighties, when Umberto Bossi, elected at the [[Italian Senate]], got his title of ''Senatür'', or senator in a northern Italian dialect, a nickname he kept also when he no longer was a senator. The support for the party skyrocketed in the early nineties because of the huge political corruption scandal known as [[Tangentopoli]] and the [[Mani pulite]] investigations.
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The '''Lega Nord''' ([[Italian language|Italian]] for "'''Northern League'''," '''LN''') is an [[List of political parties in Italy|Italian political party]] founded in [[1991]] as a federation of several [[regional party|regional parties]] in northern Italy, most of which had arisen, and all of which had expanded their share of the electorate in the 1980s.  
  
The Northern League is a merger of the various regional movements (often named "league"), including the [[Lombard League]] (''Lega lombarda'') and the League of [[Venice]] (''Łiga Veneta'').  The movement was founded in [[1989]], and became part of a governing coalition for the first time in [[Silvio Berlusconi]]'s government in [[1994]]; the League was instrumental to its demise by the end of the year.
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Its political program advocates greater regional [[Autonomous entity|autonomy]], especially for the Northern Italian region, which they call [[Padania]]; at times it has advocated [[secession]]. Prior to the party's adoption of the term, ''Padania'' was a relatively obscure geographers' designation for the [[Po River]] basin.  
  
After having forced Berlusconi to resign, the Northern League attacked him vehemently for years. In [[1996]] the movement announced that its aim was the [[independence]] of Northern Italy under the name ''Padania'', a name referring to the [[Po River]] valley, but which the Northern League gave a geographically broader usage that has been steadily gaining currency, at least among its followers. The capital of Padania would be [[Mantua]], and elections were organized by the party for a "northern parliament" (with no international recognition).
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The League is led by [[Umberto Bossi]].
  
In [[2001]] they re-joined forces with Berlusconi's coalition, previous disagreements notwithstanding. The league is currently the most loyal party to Berlusconi's government, except of course [[Forza Italia|Berlusconi's own]].
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==History==
Today, they hold 30 of 630 seats in the [[Italian Chamber of Deputies|Chamber of Deputies]] and 17 of the 325 [[Italian Senate|Senate]] seats.
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===Precursors and foundation===
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One of its principal precursors (and, later, sections), the [[Lega Lombarda]] (Lombard League), attained national significance in 1987 when its leader, Bossi, was elected to the [[Italian Senate|Senate]]. Since then he has commonly been referred to as the ''Senatur'', the word for "senator" in a number of northern [[List of Languages of Italy|minority local languages]]—a nickname maintained even when he was no longer a senator.
  
In later years the League have deemphasised demands for independence, and focused rather on [[devolution]], while remaining within the framework of Italy.  In the [[European Parliament]] its [[Member of the European Parliament|MEP]]s work within the grouping [[Independence and Democracy]].
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In 1983, the [[Liga Veneta]], based in [[Veneto]], elected one MP, [[Achille Tramarin]], and a Senator, [[Graziano Girardi]].
  
== Ideology ==
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The party was formed in 1991 as a merger of the various regional movements (often named ''lega''), including the Lega Lombarda and the Liga Veneta. These regional parties continue to exist as "national sections" of the federal party, which presents itself in regional and local contests as ''Lega Lombarda-Lega Nord'', ''Liga Veneta-Lega Nord'' and so on. Support for the party skyrocketed in the early 1990s because of the huge political corruption scandal known as [[Tangentopoli]] and the [[Mani pulite]] investigations.
  
The league's culture is a mix of pride in the heritage of northern Italy (particularly with historical references to the anti-imperial [[Lombard League]]), distrust of southern Italians and especially of [[Rome|Roman]] authorities, often bordering on [[xenophobia]], elements of [[Reaganomics]], and [[independentism]].
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===Playing a role in the national stage===
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In 1994 the Lega Nord, along with the [[neo-fascism|post-fascist]] [[National Alliance (Italy)|National Alliance]], joined [[Forza Italia]] to form a coalition under [[Silvio Berlusconi]]. This government (in which the League controlled 5 ministries,  Interior with [[Roberto Maroni]], Budget with [[Giancarlo Pagliarini]], Industry with [[Vito Gnutti]], European Affairs with [[Domenico Comino]] and Institutional Reforms with [[Francesco Speroni]]) was short-lived and the League was instrumental in its demise which occurred before the end of the year.  
  
=== Reasons for the Initial Success ===
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At the beginning of 1995, the League gave a vote of confidence to the new formed cabinet of [[Lamberto Dini]], alongside with the [[Italian People's Party (1994-2002)|Italian People's Party]] and the [[Democratic Party of the Left]]. Between 1995 and 1998 the party entered in alliance with these and other parties of the centre-left in many local contexts, from [[Padua]] to [[Udine]]
Especially in the early years, it exploited resentment against [[Rome]] and the Italian government, common in northern Italy, because some northern Italians felt that the governments in Rome wasted resources collected with northern Italians' [[tax]]es.
 
  
Racism against southern Italians, often dubbed ''[[terrone|terroni]]'', and against immigrants, was also exploited. The Lega Nord's successes began roughly when large numbers of dark-skinned immigrants began to be spotted in northern-italian cities.
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===The independentist years===
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After the success at the elections in 1996, the movement announced that its aim was the [[independence]] of Northern Italy under the name ''Padania'', a name previously referring to the [[Po River]] valley, but which the Lega Nord gave a geographically broader usage that has been steadily gaining currency, at least among its followers. The capital of Padania would be [[Mantua]], and elections were organized by the party for a "northern parliament" (with no international recognition).
  
Another key factor was public disillusionment with old political parties, as the scandals of [[Tangentopoli]] were unveiled from [[1992]] on.
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===Return in the centre-right and participation to the national government===
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In 2000 the party re-joined forces with Berlusconi's coalition, previous disagreements notwithstanding, leading the centre-right to the huge victory in that year regional elections and to the triumph in the [[Italian general election, 2001|2001 general election]].
  
===Federalism or Secession===
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In that period they held 30 of 630 seats in the [[Italian Chamber of Deputies|Chamber of Deputies]], 17 of the 325 [[Italian Senate|Senate]] seats, and three ministers: [[Roberto Maroni]] at Labour and Social Affairs, [[Roberto Castelli]] at Justice and [[Umberto Bossi]] himself at Institutional Reforms and Devolution (replaced by [[Roberto Calderoli]] in June 2004, who in turn had to resign after the "[[Roberto Calderoli#Role in the "Cartoon Crisis"|Calderoli crisis]]" in mid-February 2006).
The exact program of Lega Nord was not clear in the early years: some opponents claimed it wanted [[secession]] in [[Yugoslav wars|Yugoslav]] style, other times it appeared they simply requested more autonomy for northern regions. The League eventually  settled on the [[federalism]], that became rapidly a [[buzzword]] and a popular issue in most Italian political parties, with the exception of [[fascist]]s and [[communist]]s, which opposed it for respectively breaking up the [[motherland]] and undermining cross-regional [[solidarity]], especially important in Italy because of the wide economic divide between the rich north and the poorer south.
 
  
The party later moved on, in [[1995]], to open [[secession]]ism, declaring the splitting of Italy in three entities, named by Lega-Nord ideologist [[Gianfranco Miglio]]: [[Padania]], [[Etruria]] and the [[South]]. The South was only later given the name [[Ausonia]]. As a symbolic act of birth of the new nation, Bossi took a bottle of water from the springs of [[Po]] (which in [[Latin]] is ''padus'', giving background for the name ''Padania''), which was poured in the sea of [[Venice]] by a little girl a few days later.
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In later years the League have deemphasised demands for independence, and focused rather on [[devolution]], while remaining within the framework of Italy, as it was its original goal: not to secede from Italy but to transform the whole country in a federal State. This is the big difference between the League and the other European autonomist parties, which demand special rights only for their regions (see the [[Basque Nationalist Party]], the [[Republican Left of Catalonia]], the [[Plaid Cymru]], the [[Scottish National Party]], or the [[Vlaams Belang]]).
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==== Allegations of "selling out" to Berlusconi ====
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The League was the most loyal party to Berlusconi's government 2001–2006, except of course Berlusconi's own [[Forza Italia]] party. The League became so loyal to Berlusconi, in fact, that it was alleged that Berlusconi had "bought them out": in [[2007]], elements from investigations into illegal [[wiretapping]] practices in [[Telecom Italia]] seemed to indicate the possibility that 70 billion [[Italian lira|lire]] (about [[€]] 35 million) were paid by Berlusconi before the 2001 elections to buy the League's "total fealty" . Berlusconi's [[lawyer]] [[Niccolò Ghedini]], [[Umberto Bossi]] himself and [[Roberto Castelli]] immediately denied that this had happened.
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[[Image:Logo LegaNord-MPA 2006.png|thumb|float|right|Logo of the joint list Lega Nord-MPA]]
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===2006 general election and constitutional referendum===
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In February 2006, the Lega Nord announced that it had reached an agreement with the [[Movement for Autonomy]], a brand-new centrist party of Southern Italy led by MEP and President of the Province of Catania [[Raffaele Lombardo]]. Thus, the two parties formed the [[Pact for the Autonomies]] (to which also the [[Sardinian Action Party]] took part) and presented a joint list for the [[Italian general election, 2006]] in the whole country. Together, they elected 26 deputies and 13 senators, a decrease of four in each house from the previous legislature.
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In an interview that sparked considerable controversy, [[Umberto Bossi]] said he feared that, if the 2006 constitutional referendum did not succeed (as, indeed it did not), maybe someone would pursue non-democratic means to obtain autonomy for the North. Although Bossi never said that his own party would pursue non-democratic means, because of the ambiguity of his words, criticism was unanimous from [[The Union (political coalition)|the opposition Union coalition]], but also by the more moderate components of the [[House of Freedoms]] coalition, to which the League belongs.
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===Party's new strategy===
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Some months later, Bossi delivered a speech at a meeting of the independentist faction of the League, led by [[Mario Borghezio]], saying that the movement will pursue its goals only through legal and institutional means. Two days later [[Roberto Castelli]], Senate floor leader of the League, remarked that "secession is dead", referring to any possibility of secession at that time, though independence for Padania remains the final and long-term goal of the party.
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Although the relationship between Umberto Bossi and [[Silvio Berlusconi]] remains strong and the North is upset by the moves of the government led by [[Romano Prodi]] (whose campaigning against constitutional reform is not to be forgotten in regions as [[Veneto]] and [[Lombardy]] in the short time), there are crescent rumors about the possibility of an alliance between the League and the centre-left.
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Anyway, Umberto Bossi might lead the party into a federation of centre-right parties, composed of [[Forza Italia]], [[National Alliance (Italy)|National Alliance]] and some other minor formations, as Berlusconi wants in order to enforce the [[House of Freedoms]] coalition.
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==Ideology==
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The party's ideology is a combination of [[federalism|political federalism]], [[fiscal federalism]] and [[regionalism]]. In [[Veneto]] it supports [[Venetism]], in [[Lombardy]] the defense of Lombard culture and language, in [[Piedmont]] the defense of Piedmontese culture and language and so on. We can say that the League is based on a collection of different regionalisms, put together in the name of federalism. Sometimes it seemed possible that the League should unite also with similar leagues of the Centre-South, but this did not succeed, notwithstanding the presence of the [[Lega Libertà Lazio]], the [[Lega Sud Ausonia]], the [[Federalist Alliance]] and the newly formed [[Lega Abruzzo Marsica]]. Anyway the party continues to dialogue with regionalist parties throughout Italy, including the [[Valdotanian Union]], the [[Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party]], the [[Movement for Autonomy]] and the [[Sardinian Action Party]].
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 +
The League's culture is a mix of pride in the heritage of northern Italy (particularly with historical references to the anti-[[Holy Roman Empire|imperial]] [[Lega Lombarda]], the warrior figure on the party emblems belong to [[Alberto da Giussano]], a mythical figure of wars against [[Frederick Barbarossa|Barbarossa]], from which they inherited anti-[[monopolism]] and anti-[[centralism]]), distrust of southern Italians and especially of [[Rome|Roman]] authorities, sometimes bordering on some kind of [[xenophobia]], including some support for [[free market economics]], and [[independentism]], [[hate]] for Italy and especially its [[flag of Italy|flag]], and claims of a [[Celt|Celtic]] [[Cultural heritage|heritage]].
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Despite having its reason of life in federalism, so that the party's constitution says that the party will end its political activity when federalism is obtained, the League is no longer a single-issue party. It is anyway difficult to define it in the left-right spectrum because it is [[Conservatism|conservative]], [[Centrism|centrist]] and [[left-wing politics|leftish]] in relation to different issues. It has been said that the League is [[populist]] in the European sense (i.e. demagogic, xenophobic...), but this assumption does not fit well. It would be probably more accurate to define the party as populist in the U.S. sense, referring to the experience of the [[Populist Party (United States)|United States Populist Party]], a short-lived third party grown in the final years of the [[19th Century]].
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The League is populist in the sense that it is an anti-[[monopolism|monopolist]] and anti-[[elitism|elitist]] popular and participative party (it is one of the few Italian political parties to not permit [[free-masonry|free-masons]] to join), which "fights against the big powers". This is the reason why the party is strong in the North, despite being obscured and badly-presented by national media, television and newspapers. The party is also [[libertarian]]-populist for its promoting of small-ownership, small and medium-sized industries and, in general, [[small government]] against governmental [[bureaucracy]], public money's waste, [[pork barrel]] spending and [[corruption]].
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===Policies===
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The party takes a [[social conservatism|social-conservative]] stance on social issues, as abortion, euthanasia, medical embryonic stem-cell research, artificial insemination, gay rights (even if there is an association called "Padanian Gays" linked to the party) and drug use (even if it once supported the legalization of marijuana), despite some notable exceptions: [[Giancarlo Pagliarini]], [[Rossana Boldi]] and, at some extent, [[Roberto Castelli]] represent the [[social liberalism|social-liberal]] wing within party ranks.
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The League supports the case for lower taxes, especially for families and small enterprises, and an end to public money to help big businesses facing crisis, as it has happened for [[FIAT]] and for [[Alitalia]].
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The party has also a stronger commitment to the [[Natural environment|environment]] than all the other parties of the [[House of Freedoms]] have and, when in power at the local level, it supports strongly public green areas, the constitution of natural parks, the recycling of waste and the stop (or a regulation) of the construction of sheds in country areas. The League supports also the protection of traditional foods and, in general, represents many farmers who are upset about the [[Common Agricultural Policy]]. It is not to forget that the first affiliation of the League's MEPs during IV parliamentary term was to the Rainbow Group formed basically by the [[European Greens]], while from the beginning of the V term in 1994 to 1997 they were affiliated to the [[European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party]] group.
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The League has a tough, and often harsh, stance on crime, illegal immigration, especially those from Muslim countries, and terrorism. In particular the ''Leghisti'' support the encouragement of immigration from non-Muslim countries in order to protect the "[[Christian identity]]" of Italy and Europe (which they want to be based on the so-called "Judeo-Christian heritage").
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In foreign policy the League criticizes often the [[European Union]] (it was the only party, alongside with the [[Communist Refoundation Party]] in Italian Parliament to vote against the European Constitution) and opposes what it calls the idea of an "European Super-State", while it favors a "Europe of Regions", as the [[Christian Social Union]] and the [[European Free Alliance]]. The party has never had a particularly pro-[[United States|U.S.]] stance, although it admires the American federal political system, and indeed its MPs opposed both the [[Gulf War]] in 1991 and the [[NATO]] intervention in [[Kosovo War|Kosovo]] in 1999 in the name of [[pacifism]], and Umberto Bossi supported and personally met [[Slobodan Milosević]] during that war. However, after [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] and the emergence of [[Islamist terrorism]], the League became a supporter of the American efforts in [[War on terror]], while putting several reservations about its policy over [[Iraq]]. The League also supported [[Jörg Haider]], with whose movement they formed a single parliamentary group in the European Parliament in [[1999]].
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[[Image:Leganord.jpg|thumb|Publicity Car of the Italian Lega Nord Party for the regional Elections in the Tuscany on 3. April 2005 on the "Piazza della Repubblica" in [[Florence]]]]
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===Reasons for the initial success===
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Especially in the early years, the League exploited resentment against [[Rome]] (famous the slogan "''Roma ladrona''" , Italian for ''Rome big thief'') and the Italian government, common in northern Italy, because some northern Italians felt that the governments in Rome wasted resources collected mostly from northern Italians' [[tax]]es.
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Discrimination against southern Italians, often dubbed ''[[terrone|terroni]]'', and resentment against illegal immigrants were also exploited. The Lega Nord's successes began roughly when large numbers of illegal immigrants from eastern Europe and northern Africa began to spike in northern Italian cities.
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 +
Another key factor was public disillusionment with old political parties, as the scandals of [[Tangentopoli]] were unveiled from [[1992]] on. However, the League's secretary himself, Umberto Bossi, was convicted for receiving a 200-million [[Italian lira|lire]] illegal contribution.
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 +
===Federalism or secession===
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The exact program of Lega Nord was not clear in the early years: some opponents claimed it wanted [[secession]] in [[Yugoslav wars|Yugoslav]] style, other times it appeared they simply requested more autonomy for northern regions. The League eventually settled on ''[[federalism]]'', which became rapidly a [[buzzword]] and a popular issue in most Italian political parties, with the exception of [[fascist]]s and [[communist]]s. The former opposed it for breaking up the [[fatherland]], the latter for undermining cross-regional [[solidarity]], especially important in Italy because of the wide economic divide between the rich north and the poorer south.
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[[Image:Flag of Padania.png|thumb|250px|[[Image:FIAV 100000.svg|23px]] Flag Ratio: 1:2<br />Padania's flag, the ''Sun of the Alps'', proposed by the Lega Nord]]
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The party later moved on, in 1995, to open secessionism, declaring the splitting of Italy in three entities, named by Lega Nord ideologist and famous political scientist [[Gianfranco Miglio]]: [[Padania]], [[Etruria]] and the [[South]]. The South was only later given the name [[Ausonia]]. As a symbolic act of birth of the new nation, Bossi took a bottle of water from the springs of River Po (which in [[Latin]] is ''Padus'', hence ''Padania''), which was poured in the sea of [[Venice]] by a little girl a few days later.
  
 
A voluntary group of militants, the [[green shirts]] ([[green]] being the colour of Padania), was also established. Opponents saw in this an echo of the [[black shirts]] of the [[Fascism|fascist movement]], but the green shirts have declared themselves non-violent, and have not been found to possess any weapons.
 
A voluntary group of militants, the [[green shirts]] ([[green]] being the colour of Padania), was also established. Opponents saw in this an echo of the [[black shirts]] of the [[Fascism|fascist movement]], but the green shirts have declared themselves non-violent, and have not been found to possess any weapons.
  
The renewed alliance with Berlusconi in [[2001]] forced the party to tone down, and Padania became the name of a proposed "macro-region", for which the League asks some degree of autonomy. The new buzzword [[devolution]] (often used in [[English language|English]]) was also introduced, but with less success than federalism.
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The renewed alliance with Berlusconi in 2001 forced the party to tone down, and Padania became the name of a proposed "macro-region", for which the League asks some degree of autonomy. The new buzzword [[devolution]] (often used in [[English language|English]]) was also introduced, but with less success than federalism.
  
 
The choice to tone down and settle just for devolution instead of secession caused criticism by part of his party's base, which led to the formation of some minor breakaway factions.
 
The choice to tone down and settle just for devolution instead of secession caused criticism by part of his party's base, which led to the formation of some minor breakaway factions.
  
=== Accusations of Racism ===
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===Controversies===
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[[Image:Lega poster.jpg|thumb|A political poster of the League for regional elections in [[Piedmont]], 2005. It reads "Guess who is last?", and pictures (from right) [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Roma people|Gypsies]], [[Black people|Blacks]], and [[Arab]]s (armed with a [[scimitar]]) coming before [[Piedmont|Piedmonteses]] in social service lines.]]
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While the League leadership dismiss charges of racism and declares itself nonviolent, there have been instances of speeches, interviews and banners pointing to that. Umberto Bossi himself said that [[Africa]]n immigrants, whom he called ''Bingo-bongo''s, should not receive popular housing paid for with Lombard money. [[Erminio Boso]] proposed to [[Racial segregation|segregate]] immigrants in different train cars  from native Italians. Umberto Bossi, in an interview, suggested opening fire on the boats of immigrants who would disembark in Italy, but after widespread criticism he declared he meant the empty boats. The former [[mayor]] of [[Treviso]], [[Giancarlo Gentilini]], talking about those he called ''immigrant slackers'', said that "We should dress them up like hares and bang-bang-bang". In June [[2005]], at a festival organised by the League, a banner was displayed saying "''[[Rape]] Pecoraro''", (referring to [[Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio]], the openly [[bisexuality|bisexual]] secretary of the [[Federation of the Greens]]); the banner caused outcry in national politics (there had recently been a wave of rapes reported in the media), and was condemned by the League's leadership, that also denied the banner was theirs.
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In 2005, [[Mario Borghezio]], MP for the League at the [[European Parliament]], was found guilty of [[arson]], for having set on fire the belongings of some immigrants sleeping under a [[bridge]] in [[Turin]] in 2000.
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Through the Associazione Umanitaria Padana Onlus ("Onlus" Padanian Humanitarian Association), the Lega Nord participates in social and economic humanitarian projects which are intended to respect local cultures, traditions, and identities. The campaigns are carried out in underdeveloped nations or in those that have suffered from war or from natural catastrophes. Locations of recent missions have included [[Darfur]], [[Iraq]], and [[Afghanistan]].
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==Factions==
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Lega Nord wants to unite all those Northern Italians who support autonomy and federalism for their land. For this reason it tends to be a de-ideologized party. Although there are no organized factions, it is possible to different tendencies or wings:
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*a '''social, progressive and populist left-wing''', composed of such people as [[Umberto Bossi]] himself (ex-[[Italian Communist Party|Communist]]), [[Roberto Maroni]] (ex-[[Proletarian Democracy|DP]] and ex-[[Federation of the Greens|Green]]), [[Francesco Speroni]], [[Gian Paolo Gobbo]], [[Gianpaolo Dozzo]], [[Andrea Gibelli]], [[Stefano Stefani]], [[Matteo Salvini]], [[Francesca Martini]] and [[Rosi Mauro]], leader of the [[Padanian Trade Union]] (''Sin. Pa.'', ''Sindacato Padano'');
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*a '''liberal-centrist faction''', which is sometimes difficult to distinguish from the first group and is composed of such people as [[Roberto Castelli]], [[Giancarlo Giorgetti]], [[Fiorello Provera]], [[Manuela Dal Lago]] (ex-[[Italian Liberal Party (1943)|Liberal]]), [[Luca Zaia]], [[Luciano Gasperini]] and [[Angelo Alessandri]];
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*a '''libertarian-liberal faction''', composed of such people as [[Roberto Cota]] and [[Daniele Molgora]] (ex-[[Italian Liberal Party (1943)|Liberal]]); also [[Giancarlo Pagliarini]], [[Gilberto Oneto]] and [[Marco Pottino]] belong to that tendency, but recently all three enterd in collision with the leadership of the party, although continuing to support most policies of it;
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*a '''Christian-democratic faction''', composed of such people as [[Giuseppe Leoni]], [[Massimo Polledri]] and [[Flavio Rodeghiero]];
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*a '''conservative right-wing''', composed of such people as [[Roberto Calderoli]], [[Mario Borghezio]] (ex-[[National Monarchist Party|PNM]]), [[Piergiorgio Stiffoni]] (ex-[[Italian Social Movement|MSI]]), [[Federico Bricolo]], [[Flavio Tosi]] and [[Erminio Boso]] who tend to be strongly social-conservative and supportive of the Catholic Church;
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*an '''independentist faction''', crossing all the other factions and composed of such people as [[Francesco Speroni]], [[Mario Borghezio]], [[Giancarlo Pagliarini]], [[Erminio Boso]] and [[Gilberto Oneto]].
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===1997 Padanian elections===
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In 1997 Lega Nord organized what it called "the first elections to the Padanian Parliament". In that occasion roughly 4 million of Northern Italians (the party indeed spoke of 6 millions) went to the "polls" and they were able to chose between a lot of Padanian parties [http://www.leganord.org/ilmovimento/storia/03_lega_nord_storia96_98.pdf]:
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*[[Matteo Salvini]] was candidate for the '''Padanian Communist Party''' (5 seats out of 210);
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*[[Roberto Maroni]], [[Marco Formentini]], [[Giovanni Meo Zilio]] (an ex-[[Italian Socialist Party|Socialist]] partisan during Italian Resistance), [[Franco Colleoni]] and [[Mariella Mazzetto]] launched the social-democratic '''European Democrats-Padanian Labour''' (52 seats);
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*a group of Venetian ''Leghisti'' formed the [[Venetism|Venetist]] [[Padanian Lions]] (14 seats);
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*[[Giuseppe Leoni]] and [[Roberto Ronchi]] founded the Christian-democratic '''Padanian Catholics''' (20 seats);
 +
*[[Giancarlo Pagliarini]], [[Vito Gnutti]], [[Roberto Cota]] and [[Massimo Zanello]] led the liberal-conservative [[Forza Italia]]-styled '''Liberal Democrats-Forza Padania''' (50 seats), which supported an alliance with [[Silvio Berlusconi]]'s party.
 +
*[[Marco Pottino]] launched '''Liberatarian and Liberal Padania''' (12 seats);
 +
*[[Erminio Boso]] led the agrarian-conservative '''Padanian Union-Agriculture, Environment, Hunting, Fishing''' (5 seats);
 +
*[[Enzo Flego]] and [[Walter Gherardini]] formed the national-conservtive '''Padanian Right''' (27 seats);
 +
*also the non-''leghista'' and [[Italian Radicals|Radical]] politician [[Benedetto Della Vedova]] was elected at the head of an anti-prohibitionist and free-market libertarian list, while [[Federation of the Greens|Green]] MP [[Nando Dalla Chiesa]] was an unsuccessful candidate in Milan.
 +
 
 +
This is to explain how there are many ideological varieties within Lega Nord, even if the party is strongly united by the of autonomy and federalism, which is neither left-wing nor right-wing.
 +
 
 +
===Alliances===
 +
It has been said that in the Lega Nord, there have always been different perspectives about the national alliances to forge. In 1994, some days before the announcement of the [[Umberto Bossi|Bossi]]-[[Silvio Berlusconi|Berlusconi]] pact which led to the formation of the ''Polo delle Libertà'', [[Roberto Maroni]], a moderate, signed a pact with [[Mario Segni]]'s ''Pact for Italy'', which was later canceled. When Bossi decided to stop supporting the first Berlusconi's government at the end of the same year, Maroni, who was minister of Interior, and many others members of the League distanced from their leader. Many were expelled (40 deputies out of 117 and 17 senators out of 60) and some switched to [[Forza Italia]] (between them [[Lucio Malan]]), while Maroni, after some months of cold in his relationship with Bossi, returned to be an active member of the League.
 +
 
 +
After the [[Italian general election, 1996|1996 general election]], in which the League went to the polls out of the big two coalitions, those who supported an alliance with Berlusconi (as [[Vito Gnutti]], [[Domenico Comino]] and [[Fabrizio Comencini]]) and those who preferred to enter into [[Romano Prodi]]'s lot did not disappear. Some of them (15 deputies out of 59 and 9 senators out of 27) and left the party to switch both to the centre-right and to the centre-left (as [[Irene Pivetti]]). The group of Gnutti and Comino was expelled in 1999, after that they made alliances at the local level with the centre-right, while Comencini had left the party the year before to form the [[Liga Veneta Repubblica]] with the mid-term objective of entering in coalition with Forza Italia in [[Veneto]].
 +
 
 +
Anyway, after the decline of the League in the 1999 European Parliament election, senior members of it understood that it was not possible to reach the party's goals if the party continued to go all alone. Some as Maroni, whose heart, despite his defense of Berlusconi in 1994, has always been left-leaning, preferred an alliance with the centre-left. Again he forged an alliance with a coalition, this time the centre-left, only to be refuted by Bossi, who had previously invited him to pursue direct talks with [[Massimo D'Alema]], as in 1994 with Segni. These talks were successful, so that in [[Lombardy]] the centre-left candidate in 2000 regional elections would have been Maroni himself, but Bossi decided to go back in alliance with Berlusconi, who was the front-runner for [[Italian general election, 2001|2001 general election]]. Indeed the League, within with the other [[House of Freedoms]] parties, won both 2005 regional elections and 2001 general election, after which it returned in government.
 +
 
 +
During the years passed in government in Rome (2001-06), the party saw the emergence of two different political lines about alliances: some, led by [[Roberto Calderoli]] and [[Roberto Castelli]] (with the backing of an ill Umberto Bossi), supported vigorously the participation to the centre-right, while others, represented by Roberto Maroni and [[Giancarlo Giorgetti]], were less warm about it. Some of them spoke even of thinking about joining the centre-left some time after the [[Italian general election, 2006|2006 general election]], which they were sure to lose. This idea was explained by the evidence that, without any support from the left, it seemed even more difficult to win in the constitutional referendum, which would have turned Italy in a federal country. Indeed the centre-left did not change its position and the referendum was lost for the League and for the centre-right, making the North angry with the new Prodi's government and the ''Leghisti'' less keen to make an alliance with those who opposed constitutional reform.
 +
 
 +
==Popular support==
 +
Support for the Lega Nord is diverse even inside ''Padania''.  The party has its strongest electoral base in [[Veneto]] and [[Lombardy]].  Indeed, the League originated in Lombardy, in Bossi's native [[Province of Varese|Varese province]], while in Veneto emerged the [[Liga Veneta]], and its original name was [[Lega Lombarda]], echoing a 12th-century alliance of Northern Italian city-states that rose against the Germanic [[Holy Roman Emperor]] and defeated him). The party has considerably less popular outside these regions.
 +
 
 +
Support for the Lega Nord has varied over the time, reaching a maximum of 10.1% in 1996 (when with about 20% it was the most voted single party north of and including left-leaning [[Emilia-Romagna]]). In that magic election year for the League, it scored 29.3 in Veneto, 25.5% in Lombardy, 23.2% in [[Friuli-Venezia Giulia]], 18.2% in [[Piedmont]], 13.2 in [[Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol]], 10.2% in [[Liguria]], 7.2% in [[Emilia-Romagna]], 1.8% in [[Tuscany]], 1.5% in the [[Marche]] and 1.0% in [[Umbria]]. The ''Leghisti'', out of the two national coalitions and so damaged by going alone in 3/4 first-past-the-post electoral system, were able to elect 59 deputies and 27 senators, helping the centre-left to win, due to its successes in some northern three-contested districts. The League won barely all the seats in the so-called ''pedemontane'' Provinces, those at the foot of the [[Alps]], from [[Province of Udine|Udine]] to [[Province of Cuneo|Cuneo]], passing through Friuli, Veneto, Trentino, Lombardy and Piedmont.
 +
 
 +
However the ''Leghisti'' still control 5 of over 100 Italian provinces, namely [[Province of Sondrio|Sondrio]], [[Province of Varese|Varese]] and [[Province of Como|Como]] in [[Lombardy]] and [[Province of Treviso|Treviso]] and [[Province of Vicenza|Vicenza]] in [[Veneto]], and they are the first party also in the [[Province of Bergamo]], one of the most popolous in Italy, reason why [[Forza Italia]], the dominant party of the right, wants to maintain its hold on that administration.
 +
 
 +
In the 2005 regional elections they scored 10% of total popular votes in [[Northern Italy]] (15.8% in Lombardy, 14.7% in Veneto, 8.5% in Piedmont, 4.8% in Emilia-Romagna, 4.7% in Liguria), 1.3% in Tuscany and 0.9% in the Marche. The League remains particularly strong in ''pedemontane'' and mountain zones.
 +
 
 +
In the [[Italian general election, 2006|9-10 April 2006 general election]] the party was part of the defeated [[House of Freedoms]] and won together with the [[Movement for Autonomy]] 4.6% of the votes, electing 14 out of 315 [[Senate of Italy|senators]] and 26 out of 630 [[Italian Chamber of Deputies|deputies]]. Since then the two parties loosened their alliance and they take part to different parliamentary groups. That of the Lega Nord is formed by 23 members in the Chamber and 13 in the Senate.
 +
 
 +
===Electoral results===
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:600px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
| ||'''1990 regional'''||'''1992 general'''||'''1994 general'''||'''1995 regional'''||'''1996 general'''||'''1999 European'''||'''2000 regional'''||'''2001 general'''||'''2004 European'''||'''2005 regional'''||'''2006 general'''
 +
|-
 +
|'''Liguria'''||6.1||14.3||11.4||6.6||10.2||3.7||4.3||3.9||4.1||4.7||3.7
 +
|-
 +
|'''Piedmont'''||5.1||16.3||15.7||9.9||18.2||7.8||7.6||5.9||8.2||8.5||6.3
 +
|-
 +
|'''Lombardy'''||18.9||23.0||22.1||17.7||25.5||13.1||15.5||12.1||13.8||15.8||11.7
 +
|-
 +
|'''Veneto'''||7.8||17.3||21.6||16.7||29.5||10.7||12.0||10.2||14.1||14.7||11.1
 +
|-
 +
|'''Trentino-AA'''||-||8.9||7.6||9.6 <small>(1993)<small/>||13.2||2.4||4.7 <small>(1998)<small/>||3.7||3.5||3.2 <small>(2003)<small/>||4.5
 +
|-
 +
|'''Friuli-VG'''||-||15.3||16.9||26.7 <small>(1993)<small/>||23.2||10.1||17.3 <small>(1998)||8.2||8.5||9.3 <small>(2003)<small/>||7.2
 +
|-
 +
|'''Emilia-Romagna'''||2.9||9.6||6.4||3.4||7.2||3.0|| 2.6||3.3||3.4||4.8||3.9
 +
|-
 +
|'''Tuscany'''||0.8||3.1||2.2||0.7||1.8||0.6||0.6||0.6||0.8||1.3||1.1
 +
|-
 +
|'''Marche'''||0.2||1.3||-||0.5||1.5||0.4||-||0.3||0.9||0.9||1.0
 +
|-
 +
|'''ITALY'''||'''-'''||'''8.7'''||'''8.4'''||'''-'''||'''10.1'''||'''4.5'''||'''-'''||'''3.9'''||'''5.0'''||'''-'''||'''4.6'''
 +
|-
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
==Leadership==
 +
===Federal level===
 +
*Federal Secretary: [[Umberto Bossi]] (1991–...)
 +
**Coordinator of Federal Secretariat: [[Roberto Ronchi]] (1991–1994), [[Roberto Maroni]] (1994–2001), [[Francesco Speroni]] (2001–2005), [[Roberto Maroni]] (2005–...)
 +
**Coordinator of National Sections: [[Roberto Calderoli]] (2002–...)
 +
*Federal President: [[Franco Rocchetta]] (1991–1995), [[Stefano Stefani]] (1995–2002), [[Luciano Gasperini]] (2002–2005), [[Angelo Alessandri]] (2005–...)
 +
*Federal Administrative Secretary: [[Alessandro Patelli]] (1991–1993), [[Maurizio Balocchi]] (1993–...)
 +
 
 +
*Party Leader in the [[Italian Chamber of Deputies|Chamber of Deputies]]: [[Marco Formentini]] (1992–1994), [[Pierluigi Petrini]] (1994–1995), [[Giuseppe Leoni]] (1995–1996), [[Domenico Comino]] (1996–1999), [[Giancarlo Pagliarini]] (1999–2001), [[Alessandro Cè]] (2001–2005), [[Andrea Gibelli]] (2005–2006), [[Roberto Maroni]] (2006–...)
 +
*Party Leader in the [[Italian Senate|Senate]]: [[Francesco Speroni]] (1992–1994), [[Francesco Tabladini]] (1994–1996), [[Francesco Speroni]] (1996–1999), [[Luciano Gasperini]] (1999–2000), [[Roberto Castelli]] (2000–2001), [[Francesco Moro]] (2001–2004), [[Ettore Pirovano]] (2004–2006), [[Roberto Castelli]] (2006–...)
 +
*Party Leader in the [[European Parliament]]: [[Francesco Speroni]] (1989–1994), [[Luigi Moretti]] (1994–1999), [[Francesco Speroni]] (1999–2004), [[Mario Borghezio]] (2004–...)
 +
 
 +
===National level===
 +
====[[Liga Veneta]]====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Achille Tramarin]] (1979−1984), [[Marilena Marin]] (1984−1995), [[Fabrizio Comencini]] (1995−1998), [[Gian Paolo Gobbo]] (1998−...)
 +
*National President: [[Franco Rocchetta]] (1979−1994), [[Gian Paolo Gobbo]] (1994−1998), [[Gianpaolo Dozzo]] (1998−2001), [[Manuela Dal Lago]] (2001−...)
 +
 
 +
====[[Lega Lombarda]]====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Umberto Bossi]] (1982–1992), [[Luigi Negri]] (1992–1995), [[Roberto Calderoli]] (1995–2002), [[Giancarlo Giorgetti]] (2002–...)
 +
*National President: [[Giuseppe Leoni]] (1982–1989), [[Franco Castellazzi]] (1989–1991), [[Francesco Speroni]] (1991–1992), [[Roberto Calderoli]] (1992–1994), [[Vito Gnutti]] (1994–1999), [[Stefano Galli]] (1999–2002), [[Roberto Castelli]] (2002–...)
  
While the League leadership dismiss charges of racism, there have been instances of speeches and interviews delivered by some exponents and a supporters banner, pointing to that. Umberto Bossi himself said that [[Africa]]n immigrants, whom he called ''Bingo-bongo''s, should not receive popular housing with the same rights of ethnic Italians.{{ref|bingo}} [[Erminio Boso]] proposed to [[Racial segregation|segregate]] immigrants in train cars different than for Italians. {{ref|train}} Umberto Bossi, in an interview, suggested to open fire on the boats of immigrants who would disembark in Italy {{ref|boats}}, but after widespread criticism he declared he meant the empty boats. The former [[mayor]] of [[Treviso]], [[Giancarlo Gentilini]], talking about those he called ''immigrant slackers'', said that "We should dress them up like hares and bang-bang-bang"{{ref|slackers}}. In June [[2005]], at a festival organised by the League, a banner inciting to "''[[rape]] Pecoraro''", ([[Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio]], secretary of the [[Federation of the Greens]] and openly [[bisexuality|bisexual]]) was exposed; the banner caused outcry, and was condemned by the League's leadership{{ref|pecoraro}}.
+
====Union Piemòntèisa / Piemònt Autonomista / Lega Nord Piemònt====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Roberto Gremmo]] (1983–1989), [[Giuseppe Farassino]] (1989–1996), [[Domenico Comino]] (1996–1998), [[Bernardino Bosio]] (1998–2001), [[Roberto Cota]] (2001–...)
 +
*National President: [[Bernardino Bosio]] (1991–1998), [[Matteo Brigandì]] (1998–2001), [[Oreste Rossi]] (2001–2004), [[Mario Borghezio]] (2004–...)
  
In 2005, [[Mario Borghezio]], MP for the League at the [[European Parliament]], was found guilty of [[arson]], for having set on fire the belongings of some immigrants sleeping under a [[bridge]] in [[Turin]] in [[2000]]{{ref|arson}}.
+
====Lega Nord Friuli / Lega Nord Friuli-Venezia Giulia====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Roberto Visentin]] (1991–1997), [[Eduard Ballaman]] (1997–1999), [[Giuseppe Zoppolato]] (1999–2003), [[Ugo Follegot]] (2003–2005), [[Marco Pottino]] (2007–...), [[Ugo Follegot]] (2007–...)
 +
*National President: [[Pietro Fontanini]] (1991–2001), [[Rinaldo Bosco]] (2001–2005), [[Alessandra Guerra]] (2005–...)
  
Through the association Associazione Umanitaria Padana Onlus ("Onlus" Padanian Humanitarian Association), the Northern League participates in social and economic humanitarian projects which are intended to respect local cultures, traditions, and identities. The campaigns are carried out in underdeveloped nations or in those that have suffered from war or from natural catastrophes. Locations of recent missions have included [[Darfur]], [[Iraq]], and [[Afghanistan]]. {{ref|humanitarian}}.
+
====Lega Emiliano-Romagnola / Lega Nord Emilia====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Fabio Dosi]] (1989–1995), [[Pierluigi Copercini]] (1995–1996), [[Maurizio Parma]] (1996–2002), [[Angelo Alessandri]] (2002–...)
 +
*National President: ''unknown'' (1991–2002), [[Maurizio Parma]] (2002–...)
  
== See also ==
+
====Union Ligure / Lega Nord Liguria====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Bruno Ravera]] (1987–1996), [[Francesco Bruzzone]] (1996–...)
 +
*National President: ''unknown'' (1987–1996), [[Bruno Ravera]] (1996–1998), [[Andrea Corrado]] (1998–...)
 +
 
 +
====[[Tuscanian Alliance|Movimento per la Toscana / Alleanza Toscana / Lega Nord Toscana]]====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Carlo Forconi]] (1987–1988), [[Tommaso Fragassi]] (1988–1996), [[Vincenzo Soldati]] (1996–...)
 +
*National President: [[Tommaso Fragassi]] (1987–1988), [[Guido Niccolini]] (1988–1996), [[Walter Gherardini]] (1996–2001), [[Moreno Menconi]] (2001–...)
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Trentino====
 +
*National Secretary: [[Erminio Boso]] (1991–1996), [[Rolando Fontan]] (1996–2001), [[Denis Bertolini]] (2001–2003), [[Sergio Divina]] (2003–2005), [[Maurizio Fugatti]] (2005–...)
 +
*National President: ''unknown'' (1991–1996), [[Marco Tomasi]] (1996–2001), [[Sergio Divina]] (2001–...)
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Alto Adige====
 +
*Current National Secretary: [[Kurt Pancheri]]
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Val d'Aosta====
 +
*Current National Secretary: [[Nicolao Negroni]]
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Romagna====
 +
*Current National Secretary: [[Gianluca Pini]]
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Marche====
 +
*Current National Secretary: [[Luca Paolini (politician)|Luca Paolini]]
 +
 
 +
====Lega Nord Umbria====
 +
*Current National Secretary: [[Francesco Miroballo]]
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 
* [[List of active autonomist and secessionist movements]]
 
* [[List of active autonomist and secessionist movements]]
  
 
==Notes and references==
 
==Notes and references==
# {{note|bingo}} [http://www.repubblica.it/2003/j/sezioni/politica/immigrazione3/casemilano/casemilano.html Milano, Bossi contro il prefetto "Niente case ai bingo bongo"]. ''[[La Repubblica]]'', 4 December 2003, accessed 15 Aug 2005.
+
 
# {{note|train}} Paolo Rumiz, [http://www.repubblica.it/online/politica/boso/reportage/reportage.html Sul "treno degli africani" Vagoni separati? No, grazie]. ''[[La Repubblica]]'', 19 January 2003, accessed 15 Aug 2005.
+
# {{note|EUobserver}} [http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/news/print_version.php?article=10659 Article by Teresa Küchler] for the [[EU Observer]], reprinted by [[The Muslim News]], about the expulsion of the League from the Independence and Democracy group at the EU parliament.
# {{note|boats}} Giovanna Pajetta, [http://it.geocities.com/ilgruppodellatanadelgiaguaro/forum_libero/messaggi/58.htm Bossi prende il cannone], accessed 15 Aug 2005 on a Geocities site that says it is reprinted from ''[[Il Manifesto]]'', 17 June 2003.
 
# {{note|slackers}} Emilio Marrese [http://www.repubblica.it/online/cronaca/immitreviso/ramadan/ramadan.html Ramadan, sindaco nega lo spazio Benetton concede il palazzetto]. ''[[La Repubblica]]'', 3 December 2002, accessed 15 Aug 2005.
 
# {{note|pecoraro}} [http://www.repubblica.it/2005/f/sezioni/politica/strisciolega/strisciolega/strisciolega.html Invitation to 'rape' Pecoraro on a banner at a League festival], article by [[La Repubblica]].
 
# {{note|arson}} [http://www.gazzettino.it/VisualizzaArticolo.php3?Codice=2570753&Luogo=Main&Data=2005-9-6&Pagina=2 Borghezio, the fire was willful], article by ''Il Gazzettino'', [[September 6]] [[2005]].
 
# {{note|humanitarian}} [http://www.lapadania.com/PadaniaOnLine/Articolo.aspx?pDesc=48435,1,1 Umanitaria Padana: in Darfur missione compiuta] ("Umanitaria Padana: in Darfur, mission completed"), article in ''La Padania'', [[October 6]] [[2005]].
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
 
* [http://www.leganord.org/ Lega Nord] official site   
 
* [http://www.leganord.org/ Lega Nord] official site   
 
* [http://www.lapadania.com/ La Padania] official party organ (newspaper)  
 
* [http://www.lapadania.com/ La Padania] official party organ (newspaper)  
* [http://www.misspadania.com/ Miss Padania] beauty pagent supported by Lega Nord
+
* [http://www.misspadania.com/ Miss Padania] beauty pageant supported by Lega Nord
 
* [http://www.giovanipadani.com/ Movimento Giovani Padani] Lega Nord's youth movement
 
* [http://www.giovanipadani.com/ Movimento Giovani Padani] Lega Nord's youth movement
 
* [http://www.leganord.org/c_3_associazioni_umanitaria_padana.htm Associazione Umanitaria Padana Onlus] Humanitarian association
 
* [http://www.leganord.org/c_3_associazioni_umanitaria_padana.htm Associazione Umanitaria Padana Onlus] Humanitarian association
 +
* [http://numismondo.com/pm/pad/ Padania (Lega Nord) Paper Money]
 +
  
 
{{Political parties of Italy}}
 
{{Political parties of Italy}}
  
 
[[Category:Political parties in Italy]]
 
[[Category:Political parties in Italy]]
[[Category:Euronationalist parties]]
 
[[Category:Eurosceptic parties]]
 
[[Category:Secessionist organizations]]
 

Latest revision as of 09:36, 2 March 2009

Lega nord.png
Lega Nord
Party name Italian Lega Nord
Party status Regional Party of Northern Italy
Leader Umberto Bossi
Coalition House of Freedoms
Newspaper La Padania
Ideology Regionalism, Federalism, Populism
International affiliation none
European affiliation none
European parliament group Union for Europe of the Nations
Membership 131,423 (2003, [1])
Website http://www.leganord.org
Color code green
Foundation February 15, 1991
Headquarters Via Bellerio, 41
20161 Milan


The Lega Nord (Italian for "Northern League," LN) is an Italian political party founded in 1991 as a federation of several regional parties in northern Italy, most of which had arisen, and all of which had expanded their share of the electorate in the 1980s.

Its political program advocates greater regional autonomy, especially for the Northern Italian region, which they call Padania; at times it has advocated secession. Prior to the party's adoption of the term, Padania was a relatively obscure geographers' designation for the Po River basin.

The League is led by Umberto Bossi.

History

Precursors and foundation

One of its principal precursors (and, later, sections), the Lega Lombarda (Lombard League), attained national significance in 1987 when its leader, Bossi, was elected to the Senate. Since then he has commonly been referred to as the Senatur, the word for "senator" in a number of northern minority local languages—a nickname maintained even when he was no longer a senator.

In 1983, the Liga Veneta, based in Veneto, elected one MP, Achille Tramarin, and a Senator, Graziano Girardi.

The party was formed in 1991 as a merger of the various regional movements (often named lega), including the Lega Lombarda and the Liga Veneta. These regional parties continue to exist as "national sections" of the federal party, which presents itself in regional and local contests as Lega Lombarda-Lega Nord, Liga Veneta-Lega Nord and so on. Support for the party skyrocketed in the early 1990s because of the huge political corruption scandal known as Tangentopoli and the Mani pulite investigations.

Playing a role in the national stage

In 1994 the Lega Nord, along with the post-fascist National Alliance, joined Forza Italia to form a coalition under Silvio Berlusconi. This government (in which the League controlled 5 ministries, Interior with Roberto Maroni, Budget with Giancarlo Pagliarini, Industry with Vito Gnutti, European Affairs with Domenico Comino and Institutional Reforms with Francesco Speroni) was short-lived and the League was instrumental in its demise which occurred before the end of the year.

At the beginning of 1995, the League gave a vote of confidence to the new formed cabinet of Lamberto Dini, alongside with the Italian People's Party and the Democratic Party of the Left. Between 1995 and 1998 the party entered in alliance with these and other parties of the centre-left in many local contexts, from Padua to Udine

The independentist years

After the success at the elections in 1996, the movement announced that its aim was the independence of Northern Italy under the name Padania, a name previously referring to the Po River valley, but which the Lega Nord gave a geographically broader usage that has been steadily gaining currency, at least among its followers. The capital of Padania would be Mantua, and elections were organized by the party for a "northern parliament" (with no international recognition).

Return in the centre-right and participation to the national government

In 2000 the party re-joined forces with Berlusconi's coalition, previous disagreements notwithstanding, leading the centre-right to the huge victory in that year regional elections and to the triumph in the 2001 general election.

In that period they held 30 of 630 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, 17 of the 325 Senate seats, and three ministers: Roberto Maroni at Labour and Social Affairs, Roberto Castelli at Justice and Umberto Bossi himself at Institutional Reforms and Devolution (replaced by Roberto Calderoli in June 2004, who in turn had to resign after the "Calderoli crisis" in mid-February 2006).

In later years the League have deemphasised demands for independence, and focused rather on devolution, while remaining within the framework of Italy, as it was its original goal: not to secede from Italy but to transform the whole country in a federal State. This is the big difference between the League and the other European autonomist parties, which demand special rights only for their regions (see the Basque Nationalist Party, the Republican Left of Catalonia, the Plaid Cymru, the Scottish National Party, or the Vlaams Belang).

Allegations of "selling out" to Berlusconi

The League was the most loyal party to Berlusconi's government 2001–2006, except of course Berlusconi's own Forza Italia party. The League became so loyal to Berlusconi, in fact, that it was alleged that Berlusconi had "bought them out": in 2007, elements from investigations into illegal wiretapping practices in Telecom Italia seemed to indicate the possibility that 70 billion lire (about 35 million) were paid by Berlusconi before the 2001 elections to buy the League's "total fealty" . Berlusconi's lawyer Niccolò Ghedini, Umberto Bossi himself and Roberto Castelli immediately denied that this had happened.

Logo of the joint list Lega Nord-MPA

2006 general election and constitutional referendum

In February 2006, the Lega Nord announced that it had reached an agreement with the Movement for Autonomy, a brand-new centrist party of Southern Italy led by MEP and President of the Province of Catania Raffaele Lombardo. Thus, the two parties formed the Pact for the Autonomies (to which also the Sardinian Action Party took part) and presented a joint list for the Italian general election, 2006 in the whole country. Together, they elected 26 deputies and 13 senators, a decrease of four in each house from the previous legislature.

In an interview that sparked considerable controversy, Umberto Bossi said he feared that, if the 2006 constitutional referendum did not succeed (as, indeed it did not), maybe someone would pursue non-democratic means to obtain autonomy for the North. Although Bossi never said that his own party would pursue non-democratic means, because of the ambiguity of his words, criticism was unanimous from the opposition Union coalition, but also by the more moderate components of the House of Freedoms coalition, to which the League belongs.

Party's new strategy

Some months later, Bossi delivered a speech at a meeting of the independentist faction of the League, led by Mario Borghezio, saying that the movement will pursue its goals only through legal and institutional means. Two days later Roberto Castelli, Senate floor leader of the League, remarked that "secession is dead", referring to any possibility of secession at that time, though independence for Padania remains the final and long-term goal of the party.

Although the relationship between Umberto Bossi and Silvio Berlusconi remains strong and the North is upset by the moves of the government led by Romano Prodi (whose campaigning against constitutional reform is not to be forgotten in regions as Veneto and Lombardy in the short time), there are crescent rumors about the possibility of an alliance between the League and the centre-left.

Anyway, Umberto Bossi might lead the party into a federation of centre-right parties, composed of Forza Italia, National Alliance and some other minor formations, as Berlusconi wants in order to enforce the House of Freedoms coalition.

Ideology

The party's ideology is a combination of political federalism, fiscal federalism and regionalism. In Veneto it supports Venetism, in Lombardy the defense of Lombard culture and language, in Piedmont the defense of Piedmontese culture and language and so on. We can say that the League is based on a collection of different regionalisms, put together in the name of federalism. Sometimes it seemed possible that the League should unite also with similar leagues of the Centre-South, but this did not succeed, notwithstanding the presence of the Lega Libertà Lazio, the Lega Sud Ausonia, the Federalist Alliance and the newly formed Lega Abruzzo Marsica. Anyway the party continues to dialogue with regionalist parties throughout Italy, including the Valdotanian Union, the Trentino Tyrolean Autonomist Party, the Movement for Autonomy and the Sardinian Action Party.

The League's culture is a mix of pride in the heritage of northern Italy (particularly with historical references to the anti-imperial Lega Lombarda, the warrior figure on the party emblems belong to Alberto da Giussano, a mythical figure of wars against Barbarossa, from which they inherited anti-monopolism and anti-centralism), distrust of southern Italians and especially of Roman authorities, sometimes bordering on some kind of xenophobia, including some support for free market economics, and independentism, hate for Italy and especially its flag, and claims of a Celtic heritage.

Despite having its reason of life in federalism, so that the party's constitution says that the party will end its political activity when federalism is obtained, the League is no longer a single-issue party. It is anyway difficult to define it in the left-right spectrum because it is conservative, centrist and leftish in relation to different issues. It has been said that the League is populist in the European sense (i.e. demagogic, xenophobic...), but this assumption does not fit well. It would be probably more accurate to define the party as populist in the U.S. sense, referring to the experience of the United States Populist Party, a short-lived third party grown in the final years of the 19th Century.

The League is populist in the sense that it is an anti-monopolist and anti-elitist popular and participative party (it is one of the few Italian political parties to not permit free-masons to join), which "fights against the big powers". This is the reason why the party is strong in the North, despite being obscured and badly-presented by national media, television and newspapers. The party is also libertarian-populist for its promoting of small-ownership, small and medium-sized industries and, in general, small government against governmental bureaucracy, public money's waste, pork barrel spending and corruption.

Policies

The party takes a social-conservative stance on social issues, as abortion, euthanasia, medical embryonic stem-cell research, artificial insemination, gay rights (even if there is an association called "Padanian Gays" linked to the party) and drug use (even if it once supported the legalization of marijuana), despite some notable exceptions: Giancarlo Pagliarini, Rossana Boldi and, at some extent, Roberto Castelli represent the social-liberal wing within party ranks.

The League supports the case for lower taxes, especially for families and small enterprises, and an end to public money to help big businesses facing crisis, as it has happened for FIAT and for Alitalia.

The party has also a stronger commitment to the environment than all the other parties of the House of Freedoms have and, when in power at the local level, it supports strongly public green areas, the constitution of natural parks, the recycling of waste and the stop (or a regulation) of the construction of sheds in country areas. The League supports also the protection of traditional foods and, in general, represents many farmers who are upset about the Common Agricultural Policy. It is not to forget that the first affiliation of the League's MEPs during IV parliamentary term was to the Rainbow Group formed basically by the European Greens, while from the beginning of the V term in 1994 to 1997 they were affiliated to the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party group.

The League has a tough, and often harsh, stance on crime, illegal immigration, especially those from Muslim countries, and terrorism. In particular the Leghisti support the encouragement of immigration from non-Muslim countries in order to protect the "Christian identity" of Italy and Europe (which they want to be based on the so-called "Judeo-Christian heritage").

In foreign policy the League criticizes often the European Union (it was the only party, alongside with the Communist Refoundation Party in Italian Parliament to vote against the European Constitution) and opposes what it calls the idea of an "European Super-State", while it favors a "Europe of Regions", as the Christian Social Union and the European Free Alliance. The party has never had a particularly pro-U.S. stance, although it admires the American federal political system, and indeed its MPs opposed both the Gulf War in 1991 and the NATO intervention in Kosovo in 1999 in the name of pacifism, and Umberto Bossi supported and personally met Slobodan Milosević during that war. However, after September 11, 2001 attacks and the emergence of Islamist terrorism, the League became a supporter of the American efforts in War on terror, while putting several reservations about its policy over Iraq. The League also supported Jörg Haider, with whose movement they formed a single parliamentary group in the European Parliament in 1999.


Publicity Car of the Italian Lega Nord Party for the regional Elections in the Tuscany on 3. April 2005 on the "Piazza della Repubblica" in Florence

Reasons for the initial success

Especially in the early years, the League exploited resentment against Rome (famous the slogan "Roma ladrona" , Italian for Rome big thief) and the Italian government, common in northern Italy, because some northern Italians felt that the governments in Rome wasted resources collected mostly from northern Italians' taxes.

Discrimination against southern Italians, often dubbed terroni, and resentment against illegal immigrants were also exploited. The Lega Nord's successes began roughly when large numbers of illegal immigrants from eastern Europe and northern Africa began to spike in northern Italian cities.

Another key factor was public disillusionment with old political parties, as the scandals of Tangentopoli were unveiled from 1992 on. However, the League's secretary himself, Umberto Bossi, was convicted for receiving a 200-million lire illegal contribution.

Federalism or secession

The exact program of Lega Nord was not clear in the early years: some opponents claimed it wanted secession in Yugoslav style, other times it appeared they simply requested more autonomy for northern regions. The League eventually settled on federalism, which became rapidly a buzzword and a popular issue in most Italian political parties, with the exception of fascists and communists. The former opposed it for breaking up the fatherland, the latter for undermining cross-regional solidarity, especially important in Italy because of the wide economic divide between the rich north and the poorer south.

FIAV 100000.svg Flag Ratio: 1:2
Padania's flag, the Sun of the Alps, proposed by the Lega Nord

The party later moved on, in 1995, to open secessionism, declaring the splitting of Italy in three entities, named by Lega Nord ideologist and famous political scientist Gianfranco Miglio: Padania, Etruria and the South. The South was only later given the name Ausonia. As a symbolic act of birth of the new nation, Bossi took a bottle of water from the springs of River Po (which in Latin is Padus, hence Padania), which was poured in the sea of Venice by a little girl a few days later.

A voluntary group of militants, the green shirts (green being the colour of Padania), was also established. Opponents saw in this an echo of the black shirts of the fascist movement, but the green shirts have declared themselves non-violent, and have not been found to possess any weapons.

The renewed alliance with Berlusconi in 2001 forced the party to tone down, and Padania became the name of a proposed "macro-region", for which the League asks some degree of autonomy. The new buzzword devolution (often used in English) was also introduced, but with less success than federalism.

The choice to tone down and settle just for devolution instead of secession caused criticism by part of his party's base, which led to the formation of some minor breakaway factions.

Controversies

A political poster of the League for regional elections in Piedmont, 2005. It reads "Guess who is last?", and pictures (from right) Chinese, Gypsies, Blacks, and Arabs (armed with a scimitar) coming before Piedmonteses in social service lines.

While the League leadership dismiss charges of racism and declares itself nonviolent, there have been instances of speeches, interviews and banners pointing to that. Umberto Bossi himself said that African immigrants, whom he called Bingo-bongos, should not receive popular housing paid for with Lombard money. Erminio Boso proposed to segregate immigrants in different train cars from native Italians. Umberto Bossi, in an interview, suggested opening fire on the boats of immigrants who would disembark in Italy, but after widespread criticism he declared he meant the empty boats. The former mayor of Treviso, Giancarlo Gentilini, talking about those he called immigrant slackers, said that "We should dress them up like hares and bang-bang-bang". In June 2005, at a festival organised by the League, a banner was displayed saying "Rape Pecoraro", (referring to Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio, the openly bisexual secretary of the Federation of the Greens); the banner caused outcry in national politics (there had recently been a wave of rapes reported in the media), and was condemned by the League's leadership, that also denied the banner was theirs.

In 2005, Mario Borghezio, MP for the League at the European Parliament, was found guilty of arson, for having set on fire the belongings of some immigrants sleeping under a bridge in Turin in 2000.

Through the Associazione Umanitaria Padana Onlus ("Onlus" Padanian Humanitarian Association), the Lega Nord participates in social and economic humanitarian projects which are intended to respect local cultures, traditions, and identities. The campaigns are carried out in underdeveloped nations or in those that have suffered from war or from natural catastrophes. Locations of recent missions have included Darfur, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

Factions

Lega Nord wants to unite all those Northern Italians who support autonomy and federalism for their land. For this reason it tends to be a de-ideologized party. Although there are no organized factions, it is possible to different tendencies or wings:

1997 Padanian elections

In 1997 Lega Nord organized what it called "the first elections to the Padanian Parliament". In that occasion roughly 4 million of Northern Italians (the party indeed spoke of 6 millions) went to the "polls" and they were able to chose between a lot of Padanian parties [2]:

This is to explain how there are many ideological varieties within Lega Nord, even if the party is strongly united by the of autonomy and federalism, which is neither left-wing nor right-wing.

Alliances

It has been said that in the Lega Nord, there have always been different perspectives about the national alliances to forge. In 1994, some days before the announcement of the Bossi-Berlusconi pact which led to the formation of the Polo delle Libertà, Roberto Maroni, a moderate, signed a pact with Mario Segni's Pact for Italy, which was later canceled. When Bossi decided to stop supporting the first Berlusconi's government at the end of the same year, Maroni, who was minister of Interior, and many others members of the League distanced from their leader. Many were expelled (40 deputies out of 117 and 17 senators out of 60) and some switched to Forza Italia (between them Lucio Malan), while Maroni, after some months of cold in his relationship with Bossi, returned to be an active member of the League.

After the 1996 general election, in which the League went to the polls out of the big two coalitions, those who supported an alliance with Berlusconi (as Vito Gnutti, Domenico Comino and Fabrizio Comencini) and those who preferred to enter into Romano Prodi's lot did not disappear. Some of them (15 deputies out of 59 and 9 senators out of 27) and left the party to switch both to the centre-right and to the centre-left (as Irene Pivetti). The group of Gnutti and Comino was expelled in 1999, after that they made alliances at the local level with the centre-right, while Comencini had left the party the year before to form the Liga Veneta Repubblica with the mid-term objective of entering in coalition with Forza Italia in Veneto.

Anyway, after the decline of the League in the 1999 European Parliament election, senior members of it understood that it was not possible to reach the party's goals if the party continued to go all alone. Some as Maroni, whose heart, despite his defense of Berlusconi in 1994, has always been left-leaning, preferred an alliance with the centre-left. Again he forged an alliance with a coalition, this time the centre-left, only to be refuted by Bossi, who had previously invited him to pursue direct talks with Massimo D'Alema, as in 1994 with Segni. These talks were successful, so that in Lombardy the centre-left candidate in 2000 regional elections would have been Maroni himself, but Bossi decided to go back in alliance with Berlusconi, who was the front-runner for 2001 general election. Indeed the League, within with the other House of Freedoms parties, won both 2005 regional elections and 2001 general election, after which it returned in government.

During the years passed in government in Rome (2001-06), the party saw the emergence of two different political lines about alliances: some, led by Roberto Calderoli and Roberto Castelli (with the backing of an ill Umberto Bossi), supported vigorously the participation to the centre-right, while others, represented by Roberto Maroni and Giancarlo Giorgetti, were less warm about it. Some of them spoke even of thinking about joining the centre-left some time after the 2006 general election, which they were sure to lose. This idea was explained by the evidence that, without any support from the left, it seemed even more difficult to win in the constitutional referendum, which would have turned Italy in a federal country. Indeed the centre-left did not change its position and the referendum was lost for the League and for the centre-right, making the North angry with the new Prodi's government and the Leghisti less keen to make an alliance with those who opposed constitutional reform.

Popular support

Support for the Lega Nord is diverse even inside Padania. The party has its strongest electoral base in Veneto and Lombardy. Indeed, the League originated in Lombardy, in Bossi's native Varese province, while in Veneto emerged the Liga Veneta, and its original name was Lega Lombarda, echoing a 12th-century alliance of Northern Italian city-states that rose against the Germanic Holy Roman Emperor and defeated him). The party has considerably less popular outside these regions.

Support for the Lega Nord has varied over the time, reaching a maximum of 10.1% in 1996 (when with about 20% it was the most voted single party north of and including left-leaning Emilia-Romagna). In that magic election year for the League, it scored 29.3 in Veneto, 25.5% in Lombardy, 23.2% in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, 18.2% in Piedmont, 13.2 in Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, 10.2% in Liguria, 7.2% in Emilia-Romagna, 1.8% in Tuscany, 1.5% in the Marche and 1.0% in Umbria. The Leghisti, out of the two national coalitions and so damaged by going alone in 3/4 first-past-the-post electoral system, were able to elect 59 deputies and 27 senators, helping the centre-left to win, due to its successes in some northern three-contested districts. The League won barely all the seats in the so-called pedemontane Provinces, those at the foot of the Alps, from Udine to Cuneo, passing through Friuli, Veneto, Trentino, Lombardy and Piedmont.

However the Leghisti still control 5 of over 100 Italian provinces, namely Sondrio, Varese and Como in Lombardy and Treviso and Vicenza in Veneto, and they are the first party also in the Province of Bergamo, one of the most popolous in Italy, reason why Forza Italia, the dominant party of the right, wants to maintain its hold on that administration.

In the 2005 regional elections they scored 10% of total popular votes in Northern Italy (15.8% in Lombardy, 14.7% in Veneto, 8.5% in Piedmont, 4.8% in Emilia-Romagna, 4.7% in Liguria), 1.3% in Tuscany and 0.9% in the Marche. The League remains particularly strong in pedemontane and mountain zones.

In the 9-10 April 2006 general election the party was part of the defeated House of Freedoms and won together with the Movement for Autonomy 4.6% of the votes, electing 14 out of 315 senators and 26 out of 630 deputies. Since then the two parties loosened their alliance and they take part to different parliamentary groups. That of the Lega Nord is formed by 23 members in the Chamber and 13 in the Senate.

Electoral results

1990 regional 1992 general 1994 general 1995 regional 1996 general 1999 European 2000 regional 2001 general 2004 European 2005 regional 2006 general
Liguria 6.1 14.3 11.4 6.6 10.2 3.7 4.3 3.9 4.1 4.7 3.7
Piedmont 5.1 16.3 15.7 9.9 18.2 7.8 7.6 5.9 8.2 8.5 6.3
Lombardy 18.9 23.0 22.1 17.7 25.5 13.1 15.5 12.1 13.8 15.8 11.7
Veneto 7.8 17.3 21.6 16.7 29.5 10.7 12.0 10.2 14.1 14.7 11.1
Trentino-AA - 8.9 7.6 9.6 (1993) 13.2 2.4 4.7 (1998) 3.7 3.5 3.2 (2003) 4.5
Friuli-VG - 15.3 16.9 26.7 (1993) 23.2 10.1 17.3 (1998) 8.2 8.5 9.3 (2003) 7.2
Emilia-Romagna 2.9 9.6 6.4 3.4 7.2 3.0 2.6 3.3 3.4 4.8 3.9
Tuscany 0.8 3.1 2.2 0.7 1.8 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.8 1.3 1.1
Marche 0.2 1.3 - 0.5 1.5 0.4 - 0.3 0.9 0.9 1.0
ITALY - 8.7 8.4 - 10.1 4.5 - 3.9 5.0 - 4.6

Leadership

Federal level

National level

Liga Veneta

Lega Lombarda

Union Piemòntèisa / Piemònt Autonomista / Lega Nord Piemònt

Lega Nord Friuli / Lega Nord Friuli-Venezia Giulia

Lega Emiliano-Romagnola / Lega Nord Emilia

Union Ligure / Lega Nord Liguria

Movimento per la Toscana / Alleanza Toscana / Lega Nord Toscana

Lega Nord Trentino

Lega Nord Alto Adige

Lega Nord Val d'Aosta

Lega Nord Romagna

Lega Nord Marche

Lega Nord Umbria

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^  Article by Teresa Küchler for the EU Observer, reprinted by The Muslim News, about the expulsion of the League from the Independence and Democracy group at the EU parliament.

External links


Political parties in Italy (complete version, historical parties)
The Union Olive Tree (Democrats of the LeftDemocracy is Freedom – Daisy) – Communist Refoundation PartyDemocratic Left
Minor: Rose in the Fist (Democratic SocialistsItalian Radicals) – Party of Italian CommunistsItaly of ValuesFederation of the GreensPopular–UDEUR
Micro: European Republican MovementDemocratic RepublicansItalian Democratic Socialist PartyUnited ConsumersMiddle-of-the-Road Italy
Regional: South Tyrolean People's PartyTrentino Tyrolean Autonomist PartyValdotanian RenewalSouthern Democratic PartySardinia Project
House of
Freedoms
Forza ItaliaNational AllianceUnion of Christian and Centre DemocratsLega Nord
Minor: Christian Democracy for the AutonomiesMovement for AutonomyPensioners' PartyTricolour FlameSocial Action
Micro: New Italian Socialist PartyItalian Republican PartyLiberal Reformers
Regional: Veneto for the European People's PartySardinian ReformersSardinian People's PartySardinian Democratic UnionNew Sicily

Others Micro: Italian Associations in South AmericaItalians in the World
Regional: Valdotanian UnionEdelweiss Aosta ValleyAutonomist FederationUnion for South TyrolThe LibertariansNorth-East Project

Complete list

In order to be included in this template a party needs to fulfil at list one of the following conditions:

  • having at least a MP or a MEP;
  • having at least two regional deputies, elected in the same Regional Council;
  • having a minister or a deputy-minister;
  • having a President of Region or a President of Province or a Mayor of a big town/city;
  • having scored more than 1% in the last general/european election at the national level;
  • having scored more than 4% in the last regional (provincial in the case of Bolzano and Trento) election.

The parties are classified as:

  • major: parties which scored more than 4% in the last general/european election at the national level (or having at least 30 MPs);
  • minor: parties which scored between 0.5% and 4% in the last general/european election at the national level (or having at least 5 MPs);
  • micro: parties which scored less than 0.5% in the last general/european election at the national level (or having less than 5 MPs);
  • regional: minor or micro-parties active only in one Region.