Neha Patil (Editor)

Conservatives and Reformists (Italy)

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President
  
Raffaele Fitto

Split from
  
Forza Italia

Vice President
  
Daniele Capezzone

Founded
  
May 2015 (launch) July 2015 (foundation)

Headquarters
  
Via Torre dell'Astrologo 44, Manfredonia

Ideology
  
Conservatism Soft euroscepticism Liberal conservatism Christian democracy Liberalism

The Conservatives and Reformists (Italian: Conservatori e Riformisti, CR or CoR) are a broadly conservative and, to some extent, Christian-democratic and liberal political party in Italy, led by Raffaele Fitto and Daniele Capezzone.

Contents

The CR emerged in May 2015 from a split from Forza Italia (FI), and is modelled on the British Conservative Party and David Cameron's brand of liberal conservatism, vision and leadership (in the run-up to the 2015 UK general election Fitto, Capezzone and other 28 MPs of their faction within FI had publicly endorsed Cameron in a letter to The Telegraph) and named after the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), the group in the European Parliament in which the Conservatives and Fitto sit. The CR joined the Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (AECR) on 13 November 2015.

Since January 2017 the CR have been part of a new party named Direction Italy (DI), also led by Fitto.

Forza Italia's Rebuilders

In November 2013 The People of Freedom, the centre-right party led by Silvio Berlusconi, was transformed into Forza Italia (FI), a reference to a defunct party with the same name. Among the strongest supporters of the return to FI, the so-called "hawks" and self-proclaimed "loyalists", a leading role was played by Raffaele Fitto. At the 2014 European Parliament election Fitto was FI's most voted candidate and was elected to the European Parliament in the South.

Fitto, the strongest backer of Berlusconi's leadership in late 2013, became his main internal challenger by mid 2014. After months of bickering with Berlusconi over the so-called "Nazareno pact" with Matteo Renzi, leader of the Democratic Party and Prime Minister, in February 2015 Fitto launched his own faction, named "Rebuilders". Fitto's allies included Capezzone, Maurizio Bianconi, Rocco Palese, Saverio Romano, Cinzia Bonfrisco, Augusto Minzolini and most Apulian MPs.

Split from Forza Italia

In the run-up of the 2015 regional elections Berlusconi and Fitto did not find an agreement on the composition of the slates in Apulia, where the party's two wings fielded two opposing candidates for president. At the 2015 Apulian regional election a list named after Fitto ("Beyond with Fitto") won 9.3% of the vote and its candidate for president, Francesco Schittulli, won 18.3% of the president's vote (won by Michele Emiliano, a Democrat), compared to 10.8% for FI and 14.4% for FI's candidate, Adriana Poli Bortone.

Two weeks before the regional elections, Fitto left the Group of the European People's Party in the European Parliament in order to join the European Conservatives and Reformists. He also left FI altogether and launched the Conservatives and Reformists (CR).

At its launch, the CR included nine deputies (eight sitting with FI, plus a dissident from Brothers of Italy, FdI) and twelve senators (ten from FI and two from Great Autonomies and Freedom), organised in a full-fledged group; two senators later defected to the Liberal Popular Alliance (ALA), but the remaining ten senators were enough to keep the senatorial group alive. In early July the CR were joined by an additional MEP, Remo Sernagiotto, who had defected from FI and the EPP to ECR.

The CR were established as a full-fledged political party on 16 July 2015.

European and Italian alliances

In November the CR joined the Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (AECR), and started a sub-group within the Mixed Group in the Chamber of Deputies with eleven deputies, ten from FI and one from FdI. CR's deputies and senators may soon join forces with the group of splinters Gaetano Quagliariello led out from the New Centre-Right, an earlier FI's spin-off, and Flavio Tosi's Act! (split from Lega Nord); such an alliance could boast more than 20 deputies and 15 senators.

In January 2016 another CR senator switched to ALA, leaving the party with only nine senators. Being ten the minimum required number to form a group in the Senate, the party risked losing that privilege, but Luigi Compagna, a senator from Quagliariello's Identity and Action (IdeA) and the Great Autonomies and Freedom group, joined the CR group in order to keep it alive, in a move that might be a prelude for a broader alliance between the two parties. In May history repeated itself: after one more senator had switched to ALA, another IdeA senator, Andrea Augello, joined forces with the CR group in order to keep it alive.

In the 2016 local elections the CR ran its lists especially in Apulia: the party won 6.2% in Brindisi and had its candidate for mayor (Angela Carluccio) elected in the run-off, 7.2% in Fasano, 5.6% in Gallipoli, 13.2% in Nardò, 11.6% in Ruvo di Puglia, and 7.2% in San Giovanni Rotondo.

In December 2016 Cinzia Bonfrisco left the party in order to join the Italian Liberal Party, giving it representation in the Senate.

In January 2017 Fitto launched a new party, named Direction Italy, including the CR and other parties.

Leadership

  • President: Raffaele Fitto (2015–present)
  • Vice President: Daniele Capezzone (2015–present)
  • Party Leader in the Chamber of Deputies: Daniele Capezzone (2015–present)
  • Party Leader in the Senate: Cinzia Bonfrisco (2015–2016)
  • Party Leader in the European Parliament: Raffaele Fitto (2015–present)
  • References

    Conservatives and Reformists (Italy) Wikipedia