Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Middle Italy (political party)

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Leader
  
Marco Follini

Merged into
  
Democratic Party

Founded
  
21 October 2006 (2006-10-21)

Dissolved
  
14 October 2007 (2007-10-14)

Split from
  
Union of Christian and Centre Democrats

Ideology
  
Centrism Christian left Christian democracy

Middle Italy (Italia di mezzo, IdM) was an centrist Italian political grouping founded in 2006 by Marco Follini, Senate member and former leader of the Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (UDC, 2002–05), and Riccardo Conti, member of the Chamber of Deputies. Initially founded as a free political association in support of the "no" vote for the 2006 constitutional referendum, it became a party on 21 October 2006, after Follini announced his resignations from the UDC caucus.

The primary goal of this political movement was to attract all those voters who were unsatisfied by the Italian political system, based on the often harsh contrapposition between the centre-left Union and the centre-right House of Freedoms, and to change, or, better, to produce the end of bi-polarism. However, IdM supported then-Prime Minister Romano Prodi in a confidence vote and then entered The Union.

Never having contested an election on its own, the party merged into the Democratic Party (PD) at its founding on 14 October 2007. Most of its members did not follow Follini in that decision and switched to Italy of the Centre, led by former Minister of the Interior Vincenzo Scotti.

References

Middle Italy (political party) Wikipedia