Harman Patil (Editor)

Liberal Popular Alliance

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President
  
Denis Verdini

Split from
  
Forza Italia

Political position
  
Centre

Founded
  
28 July 2015

Headquarters
  
Via Poli, 29 Rome

Liberal Popular Alliance

Ideology
  
Centrism Liberalism Regionalism

The Liberal Popular Alliance (Italian: Alleanza Liberalpopolare), whose full name is Liberal Popular Alliance – Autonomies (Alleanza Liberalpopolare – Autonomie, ALA), is a centrist and liberal political party in Italy.

ALA members are known as Verdiniani, from the name of their leader Denis Verdini, who was formerly a long-time member and national coordinator of three successive centre-right parties led by Silvio Berlusconi (Forza Italia, The People of Freedom and Forza Italia) until July 2015, when he broke with Berlusconi in order to support the government led by Matteo Renzi.

Verdini aimed at launching the "Moderates for Renzi", that would eventually include the other centrist parties supporting the government, namely the New Centre-Right, the Union of the Centre and Civic Choice (the Christian leftist and centrist Solidary Democracy, currently in alliance with the kin Democratic Centre, ruled out any interest in the idea).

History

The Liberal Popular Alliance emerged in July 2015 from a split from Forza Italia (FI), led by Denis Verdini, who wanted to support the reforms put forward by the Renzi Cabinet, and was joined by senators coming from different centre-right groups, including Great Autonomies and Freedom (GAL), Conservatives and Reformists (CR) and New Centre-Right (NCD). Lucio Barani, who until then was the leader of the New Italian Socialist Party (NPSI), was elected president of the senatorial group. "Autonomies" was possibly added to "Liberal Popular Alliance" because of the presence of two senators of the Movement for the Autonomies–Party of Sicilians (MpA–PdS) in the group. Other than Barani, who continued to be a member of the NPSI, and the two MpA–PdS senators, the group included non-party independents.

Between September and October, four senators and seven deputies left FI and joined Verdini; the deputies formed a joint sub-group with the Associative Movement Italians Abroad (MAIE) named "Liberal Popular Alliance – Autonomies – MAIE. Between December and January 2016, the party was joined by five more senators, including Sandro Bondi, another former FI national coordinator. Also in January, three ALA members were elected deputy chairpersons of three Senate committees. A twentieth senator and an eight deputy joined in May. Bondi left in June. In April 2016 the presence of two senators of the MpA, who had broken ties with FI while joining the ALA as direct members, was marked by a new name of the group in the Senate: "Liberal Popular Alliance – Autonomies (Movement for the Autonomies)".

The ALA fielded some lists for the 2016 local elections, especially in the South and usually in support of Democratic candidates. In Naples, the largest city in which the party was present, the ALA obtained a mere 1.4% of the vote.

Between July and December 2016, the party formed joint groups with Civic Choice (SC), which were renamed "ALA – Civic Choice for the Liberal and Popular Constituent Assembly", and attracted two intellectual leaders from the liberal wing of the old FI: Marcello Pera, a former President of the Senate, and Giuliano Urbani, a former minister of Culture in Berlusconi II Cabinet.

The ALA, SC, Pera and Urbani campaigned heavily for the "Yes" in the 2016 constitutional referendum, which resulted in a defeat for the "Yes" camp and the subsequent resignation of Renzi. The ALA did not join and support the new government led by Paolo Gentiloni.

In February 2017 two senators left the ALA in order to join Union of the Centre (UdC).

References

Liberal Popular Alliance Wikipedia


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