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Popular Democratic Front (Italy)
Left-wing political coalition in Italy from 1947 to 1948
Left-wing political coalition in Italy from 1947 to 1948
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Popular Democratic Front |
| native_name | Fronte Democratico Popolare |
| colorcode | |
| logo | Popular Democratic Front logo.png |
| leader1_title | Leaders |
| leader1_name | Palmiro Togliatti |
| Pietro Nenni | |
| foundation | |
| dissolution | |
| ideology | Communism |
| Socialism | |
| position | Left-wing |
| colours | Red |
| country | Italy |
Pietro Nenni Socialism The Popular Democratic Front (), shortened name of the Popular Democratic Front for Freedom, Peace, Labour (Italian: Fronte Democratico Popolare per la libertà, la pace, il lavoro), was a left-wing political coalition in Italy. Formed in December 1947 by the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and the Italian Communist Party (PCI), it contested the 1948 Italian general election.
History
The coalition was formed for the 1948 general election and consisted of the PSI and PCI. Its symbol was a green star surmounted by an image of Italian unification hero Giuseppe Garibaldi. The Social Christian Party (PCS) and Sardinian Action Party (PSd'Az) were not allied with the coalition and formed their own electoral lists. The right-wing of the PSI opposed the coalition, left the party, and organized a separate list as Socialist Unity; this group later became the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI).
The election of 1948 was perhaps the most important in the history of the Italian Republic, as the choice of future alliance with the United States or with the Soviet Union was at issue. The coalition got 31.0% of the vote for Italy's Chamber of Deputies and 30.8% of the country's Senate of the Republic vote.
Following the victory of Christian Democracy (DC) with 48.5%, Italy became a founding member of NATO in 1949. After the electoral defeat, while the PCI and PSI remained allies at the national level until 1956 and would govern together at the local level into the 1990s, the coalition was dissolved. Despite the loss, the PCI established itself as the main opposition to the DC and went on to become the largest Communist party in Western Europe.
Composition
| Party | Ideology | Leader | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Italian Communist Party}}" | Italian Communist Party (PCI) | Communism | |
| Marxism–Leninism | |||
| Italian Socialist Party}}" | Italian Socialist Party (PSI) | Democratic socialism |
Election results

| Election year | Votes | % | Seats | +/− | Leader | 1948 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8,136,637 (2nd) | 31.0 |
| Election year | Votes | % | Seats | +/− | Leader | 1948 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6,969,122 (2nd) | 30.8 |
References
References
- (1963). "Aggiornamenti sociali".
- Fedele, Santi. (1978). "Fronte popolare. La sinistra e le elezioni del 18 aprile 1948". Bompiani.
- Cacciatore, Giuseppe. (1979). "La sinistra socialista nel dopoguerra. Meridionalismo e politica unitaria in Luigi Cacciatore". Dedalo.
- Gundle, Stephen. (1995). "I comunisti italiani tra Hollywood e Mosca. La sfida della cultura di massa 1943-1991". Giunti.
- (1998). "Dagli archivi di Mosca. L'URSS, il Cominform e il PCI (1943-1951)". Carocci.
- Tobagi, Walter. (2009). "La rivoluzione impossibile. L'attentato a Togliatti, violenza politica e reazione popolare". Il Saggiatore.
- Belco, Victoria. (2010). "War, Massacre, and Recovery in Central Italy, 1943–1948". University of Toronto Press.
- (2001). "Rules, Choice and Strategy: The Political Economy of Italian Electoral Reform". Edward Elgar Publishing.
- Silvestri, Fabio. (April 2008). "Quel Fronte poco popolare".
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