ACTION PARTY (ITALY)

(Redirected from Partito d\'Azione)
The 'Action Party' (''Partito d'Azione'', Pd'A) was an Italian political party.

Contents
History
Prominent Members
See also
Sources

History


An anti-fascist political party in the tradition of Giuseppe Mazzini and the Risorgimento. Founded in July 1942 by former militants of Giustizia e Libertà (Justice and Liberty), liberal socialists, democrats. Ideologically they were heirs to the "liberal Socialism" of Carlo Rosselli and to Piero Gobetti's "liberal Revolution" , whose writings rejected Marxist 'economic determinism' and aimed at the overcoming of class struggle and for a 'new' shape of Socialism, respect for civil liberty and for radical change in both the social and the economic structure of Italy. From January 1943 it published a clandestine organ, "Free Italy". Central members of the National Liberation Committee they participated actively in the Italian resistance movement with units of Giustizia e Libertà (Justice and Liberty), commanded by Ferruccio Parri. It maintained a clear antimonarchical position and it was opposed to Togliatti and the Italian Communist Party's Salerno Initiative for postwar governance.
For Partito d'Azione units and involvement in the Italian resistance movement, see Giustizia e Libertà.
In the immediate post-war period it joined the government securing the post of Prime Minister for Ferruccio Parri (June-November 1945). However as a result of the internal conflict between the democratic-reformist line of Ugo La Malfa and the socialist line of Emilio Lussu,combined with the electoral defeat of 1946, the party folded. The main group of former members, led by Riccardo Lombardi, joined the Italian Socialist Party, while the Malfa group entered the Italian Republican Party.

Prominent Members



Giorgio Bassani

Riccardo Bauer

Norberto Bobbio

Andrea Caffi

Piero Calamandrei

Guido Calogero

Aldo Capitini

Nicola Chiaromonte

Carlo Azeglio Ciampi President of Italian Republic (1999-2007)

Tristano Codignola

Enrico Cuccia

Guido Dorso

Enzo Enriques Agnoletti

Vittorio Foa

Ettore Gallo

Aldo Garosci

Leone Ginzburg

Natalia Ginzburg

Ugo La Malfa

Massimo Mila

Carlo Levi

Primo Levi

Riccardo Lombardi

Emilio Lussu

Raffaele Mattioli

Ferruccio Parri

Ernesto Rossi

Manlio Rossi Doria

Joyce Salvadori Lussu

Gaetano Salvemini

Altiero Spinelli

Alberto Tarchiani

Adolfo Tino

Silvio Trentin

Leo Valiani

Franco Venturi

Paolo Vittorelli

Bruno Zevi

See also



Liberalism and radicalism in Italy

Italian resistance movement

Sources


Website of the Italian Resistance Historical Society: http://www.romacivica.net/anpiroma/antifascismo/antifascismo15.html [1]
Includes in-depth bios, recent remembrances, and selections from party documents.
Historical Dictionary entry from Paravia Mondadori Editori, an Italian Educational publishing house: http://www.pbmstoria.it/dizionari/storia_mod/p/p062.htm [2]

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