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Italy - Political Flags (Part 6)

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See also:


Party of Italian Communists (PdCI - Partito dei Comunisti Italiani)


image by Eugene Ipavec, 22 June 2006

A left-wing federation
G. Vacca, 22 September 1997

The symbol of of the PdCI can be seen at <www.comunisti-italiani.it>. It looks quite simliar to the one of the Unitarian Communists but I'm not sure if it is an old symbol or that of a different party.
In the same PdCI site the Statutes of the party describe the flag and the way it should be shown in public, with two stripes in the hoist. Here is the transcripction in italian of article 43:
"La bandiera La bandiera del Partito dei Comunisti Italiani e' rossa, e reca in colore giallo la falce, il martello e la stella d'Italia. Quando viene esposta in pubblico, all'asta vengono legati due nastri, uno coi colori nazionali, l'altro coi colori dell'Unione Europea."
M.V. Blanes, 27 September 2000

Two groups split off from the RC (Communist Refoundation Party - Partito della Rifondazione Comunista) consecutively. The second fission of the RC occurred in 1998: another more moderate group founded the PdCI ("Partito dei Comunisti Italiani" = Party of Italian Communists), that is still an independent party in the L'Ulivo coalition. The logo is similar to the logo of the "Comunisti Unitari" (Unitarian Communists), only the inscription reads "COMUNISTI ITALIANI" and is arranged in a semi-circle. The logo appears (with a thin white border) in the center of flags with a red field.
Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002

The flag of the Comunisti Italiani (Italian Communists), whose logo is the same one that the old Italian Communist Party used to have, i.e. a red flag with a yellow sickle and hammer overlapping an Italian one of similar size, although in this case the background is cyan, or pale blue. The standard size of the flag is 140 x 100 cm.
Andrea Pollett, 3 June 2004

Other Flags used by this party and RC

the two current communist parties in Italy, the RC and the PdCI, do use some other flags as well, beside their own party flags proper:

- Peace (Pace) flags. See the foto at <www.rifondazione.it>.

- Frequently used are flags with the portrait of Che Guevara and the inscription "Hasta la victoria siempre" in Castilian (Spanish) . The one variant shows the portrait in black on a plain red background, the other in red on the Cuban flag. See the fotos at <www.rifondazione.it/gadgets/img/foto/b_hasta.jpg> and <ban_cuba_che.jpg>.


image by Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002

- Not very frequently red flags with yellow hammer&sickle and yellow star (USSR style) are used. See foto at <www.rifondazione.it>.


image by Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002

- Followers of the PdCI seem to prefer a hammer&sickle flag with the portrait of Lenin. See foto at <web.tiscali.it>.

Other flags seen during demonstrations are, for instance, the PLO flag and the flag of the Kurdish ERNK. During one demonstration there was also one flag of the Bloque Nacionalista Galego. See foto at <www.rifondazione.it>.
Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002


People of Freedom (Il Popolo della Libertà)


image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 April 2008

People of Freedom (PdL), a rightist political party coalition founded in December 2007 to function as the electoral vehicle for Silvio Berlusconi in the April 2008 elections. The flag is the logo on a white field, reminiscent of Berlusconi's Forza Italia flag.
Eugene Ipavec, 16 April 2008


Pensionaries' Party (Partito Pensionati)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 7 August 2002

"Partito Pensionati" (Pensionaries' Party <www.partitopensionati.it>) - This small party has been founded in 1987 as a pressure group of the pensionaries. Otherwise the politics has been close to the christian-democratic party/parties. Currently there is one deputy of the party in the European Parliament.
The logo is simply the blue inscription "Pensionati" on a white field. I haven't found a flag. Image of the logo at <cedweb.mininterno.it:8890>.
Marcus Schmöger, 7 August 2002


Radical Party (Radicali/Partito Radicale)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 5 August 2002


image by Marcus Schmöger, 5 August 2002

"Radicali Italiani" (Italian Radicals, a.k.a. "Partito Radicale" or "Lista Emma Bonino" or "Lista Pannella" <www.radicali.it>). The "Partito Radicale" has been founded in 1955 as a fission of the left wing of the "Partito Liberale Italiano" (5.2.1.); one of the founders was Marco Pannella (now leader of the party together with Emma Bonino). The party has been and is mainly a radical-liberal and anticlerical party. First elected to the Italian parliament in 1976 (4 deputies including Marco Pannella and Emma Bonino), the "Partito Radicale" could repeat small electoral successes in the following parliamentary elections as well. At least to the world outside Italy the "Partito Radicale" became to be known, as porn star Ilona "Cicciolina" Staller was elected to the parliament in 1987 on the ticket of this party. Largely unnoticed went the election (in 1983 and 1987) of Francesco Rutelli, later (as member of the "Verdi") mayor of Rome, and now leader of the new centrist party "Margherita". In elections the "Radicali" either have presented their own lists under different names ("Lista Emma Bonino" or "Lista Pannella" after the two most prominent figures of the party) or have (at least) locally joined other parties for a common list (especially the PSI and PSDI or radical-left parties as the "Democrazia Proletaria"). This also suggests that the "Radicali" are a more left party; therefore it was a kind of surprise, when the "Lista Pannella" allied itself with Berlusconi's center-right coalition for the 1996 elections. After surprisingly successful elections to the European Parliament in 1999 (8,5% of the votes) they presented their own list for the Italian parliamentary elections in 2001 as well, but failed to win a seat with only 2% of the votes. However, the main forum of the "Partito Radicale" has never been the parliament; they focused on spectacular actions involving hunger-strike and thirst-strike, all forms of non-violent demonstrations and civil disobedience. The "Partito Radicale" used with quite some success the referendum as a political tool (for instance for the right to divorce; against criminalization of abortion etc). Since 1985, the "Radicali" attracted likeminded groups all over the world and founded the "Transnational Radical Party", that is, however, largely dominated by its Italian branch.
As symbols the "Radicali" use temporary logos for their election lists, for instance the logo of the "Lista Marco Pannella-Emma Bonino at <cedweb.mininterno.it:8890>. However, the symbol of the "Transnational Radical Party" seems to be a portrait of Mahatma Gandhi made up of the writing "Radical Party" in many (claimed to be over 50) different languages (identification with some caution: Italian, English, Russian, Spanish, French, Arabian, Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Dutch, Esperanto, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Japanese, Polish, Romanian, Turkish, and at least one unidentified language). The portrait of Gandhi presumably symbolizes the pacifist programmatics of the party and the use of classical methods of civil disobedience in the political struggle. See this logo at <www.radicalparty.org>. This logo is also used on flags, either black on white or gold on blue. On the flags the URL of the website "WWW.RADICALPARTY.ORG" is written beneath the portrait of Gandhi.
See fotos of the flag at <web.tiscali.it/falundafa/D'Amico.jpg>, <A.Biondi.jpg> and other places in this site as well at <www.radicalparty.org/cecenia/roma/MVC-328X.jpg>, <MVC-333X.jpg>, <MVC-337X.jpg> <MVC-340X.jpg> and many other photos in this site.
Marcus Schmöger, 7 August 2002


Red Brigades (BR - Brigate Rosse)


image by Anto'nio Martins-Tuva'lkin, 19 June 2004
based on <www.tkb.org>

A chronology chart at <www.brigaterosse.org>. Insight on the group from <www.tkb.org>:  
"Red Brigades
Mothertongue Name: Brigate Rosse (BR).
Aliases: Armed Communist Combatants, Italian Red Brigade, Red Regiments.
Base of Operation: Italy.
Founding Philosophy: The Red Brigades were founded on rigidly Marxist-Leninist principles. This radical leftist group advocated violence in the pursuit of class warfare. Concentrated in Italy, the Red Brigades targeted businessmen and politicians and were a notable terrorist threat in Italy during the 1970s and early 1980s. Due to developments during its existence, the Red Brigades took on some qualities of anarchist groups while still propagating its especially virulent and violent Communist philosophy. In the end, the Red Brigades' increasingly brutal attacks eroded the support of those sympathetic with the group's Communist ideals.
Current Goals: In April 1984, four of the Red Brigades' key leaders wrote a communique from their jail cells. In the open letter, the leaders proclaimed further armed combat as futile. The Red Brigades essentially ceased to exist with this letter. In their words, "The international conditions that made this struggle possible no longer exist." (Xavier Raufer, "The Red Brigades: Farewell to Arms," Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 1993, Vol.16)
However, the legacy of the Red Brigades continues to this day. Following the release of this letter, two splinter groups broke off from the Red Brigades: the New Red Brigades/Communist Combatant Party (BR/PCC) and the Red Brigades/Union of Combatant Communists (BR/UCC). The BR/PCC specifically has chosen to continue in the ideological and violent path of the Red Brigades.
Further information on <en.wikipedia.org> and <www.brigaterosse.org>.
Esteban Rivera, 8 May 2005

I'm not sure if it really was a flag proper. As with many terrorist organizations BR used clothes or placards with their logo as a background for photos or videos. I record seeing the BR logo cloth especially from the famous photo of DC leader (and former Italian prime minister) Aldo Moro, kidnapped and finally murdered by BR, see <it.wikipedia.org> and <projects.brg-schoren.ac.at>. In this photo the BR cloth does not look like a flag, rather like a hanging cloth.
Marcus Schmöger, 10 July 2005


Rose in the Fist (Rosa nel Pugno)

Rosa nel Pugno is an italian political party recently born by the fusion of the SDI (Socialist Democratic Party) and Partito Radicale (Radical Party). Here is its logo from <www.rosanelpugno.it>.
Giuseppe Bottasini, 3 December 2006

See also: Socialist rose emblem


Social Movement Tricolour Flame (MSFT - Movimento Sociale Fiamma Tricolore)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 10 August 2002


image by Marcus Schmöger, 10 August 2002

MSFT ("Movimento Sociale Fiamma Tricolore"= Social Movement Tricolour Flame <www.msifiammatric.it>) - When the old MSI transformed itself into the AN in 1994/95, the more radical wing of the party split off and founded the MSFT in January 1995. The leader of the MSFT is Pino Rauti, former MSI leader (1989-1991). In contrast to the AN, the MSFT adheres to a nostalgic fascism, especially in the form of the "Republica Sociale Italiano" di Saló (1943-45). Several groups left the MSFT founding their own small parties, as they disliked the dictatorial leadership of Rauti. In the 2001 elections the MSFT only got 0,4% and 1,0% of the votes (Camera and Senato, respectively); only one senator was elected, however on a list of the "Casa delle libertà".
The MSFT wanted to use the old symbol of the MSI, the tricoloured flame, but there was (or still is?) some legal quarrel with the AN about that. So currently the MSFT uses two modified variants of the "fiamma". The one shows a simplified tricoloured flame together with the inscription "FIAMMA TRICOLORE". The other one shows the flame as part of the first "A" in the inscription "FIAMMA", together with the inscriptions "MOVIMENTO SOCIALE" and "TRICOLORE". The statute at <www.msifiammatric.it/statuto1_10.htm> describes the second symbol (Art. 2):
"L'emblema del MSFT è momentaneamente costituito della scritta Fiamma nella quale la prima A è coniugata ad una lingua di fuoco verde, bianca e rossa sormontata dalla dicitura Movimento Sociale e con al disotto la dicitura Tricolore il tutto iscritto in un cerchio, fino a quando non sarà definita la vertenza giudiziaria con Alleanza Nazionale. In caso di sentenza positiva per il Movimento Sociale il simbolo tornerà ad essere "una Fiamma Tricolore (verde, bianca e rossa) su base trapezoidale contenente la sigla MSI in giallo-oro su fondo rosso." (The emblem of the MSFT consists at the moment of the inscription Fiamma, in which the first A is linked with a tongue of fire in green, white and red, surmounted by the inscription Movimento Sociale and beneath the inscription Tricolore, the whole inscribed in a circle, as long as the lawsuit with the Alleanza Nazionale has not been settled. In case of a decision positive for the Movimento Sociale the symbol will again be "a tricolored flame (green, white and red) on a trapezoid base containing the abbreviation MSI in golden-yellow on a red field.)
Logo at <cedweb.mininterno.it:8890>, <www.msicivitavecchia.it/logo_fiamma.gif> and <www.comune.cosenza.it/cs/elettorale/Image21.gif>
The second symbol is also used on flags, i.e. in the center, white stripe of the Tricolore. Followers of the party also use variants of the Celtic cross flags, either with white cross on black or with black cross on a white disk on a red field.
The flags can be seen at the foto on the homepage <http://www.msifiammatric.it>.
Marcus Schmöger, 10 August 2002


Southern League (Lega Sud)


image from <www.legasud.it> , located by Dov Gutterman, 22 January 2002


Students of the Left (Studenti di Sinistra)


image by Jaume Ollé, 27 March 2005


Sunflower (Girasole)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 20 July 2002

For the 2001 elections the Greens (Verdi) and one of the socialist parties (SDI) formed a sub-coalition of the L'Ulivo coalition, the Girasole (Sunflower). The logo combines the main features of the logos of the two parties. They very probably never used a flag, as this was only a quite loose coalition.
Marcus Schmöger, 20 July 2002

"Girasole" (Sunflower) sub-coalition <www.ilgirasole.org> - Only for the 2001 parliamentary elections the Verdi and the SDI founded the "Girasole" (Sunflower), a sub-coalition of the Ulivo coalition. In the two parliamentary chambers the two parties do not belong to a common group. The election emblem also showed this temporary cooperation, as it merely combined the smiling sun of the Verdi and the rose of the SDI. The logo can be found at <cedweb.mininterno.it:8890>. Obviously the Girasole has/had no flag.
Marcus Schmöger, 31 July 2002


The Left - The Rainbow (La Sinistra · l'Arcobaleno)


image by Andrea Pollett, 11 April 2008


image by Andrea Pollett, 11 April 2008

I would like to report a new Italian political flag, belonging to the coalition called La Sinistra · l'Arcobaleno (or Sinistra Arcobaleno in short), which comes in two versions.
The coalition was officially formed on December 8-9, 2007. It includes four parties of the left wing, namely: Partito della Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation Party), Partito dei Comunisti Italiani (Party of Italian Communists), Sinistra Democratica (Democratic Left), Federazione dei Verdi (the Greens).
I first saw the new flag in March 2008, during the campaign for the forthcoming political elections (April 13-14, 2008). It measures 140 x 100 cm, with a round logo (diameter: 85 cm) on either a red background (red version) or green background (green version). The reason of the double version is that the new coalition groups together parties whose traditional reference colour is red (PRF, PdCI, SD) and green (Greens).
The logo of the coalition is identical in both versions: it features the word Sinistra  ("Left") in red letters (the typeface or font used is Helvetica bold), with the article la ("the") above its letter n (in non-bold letters) and the word l'Arcobaleno (The Rainbow) below, in green letters (same typeface but smaller in size). In the lower half of the logo are seven irregular brush strokes, whose length decreases towards the bottom, in the same colours of the 'Flag of Peace', but in reversed order, i.e. (from top to bottom) red, orange, yellow, green, cyan, blue, purple. The background of the logo is white. The logo can be seen in the coalition's own website: <www.sinistrarcobaleno.it>.
Andrea Pollett, 11 April 2008


The Olive Tree (L'Ulivo)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 29 June 2002


image by Marcus Schmöger, 19 July 2002


image by Marcus Schmöger, 19 July 2002

At the 1st May demonstrations in Munich there are also always political parties and groups from foreign countries including Italy.
Flag of "L'Ulivo" (The Olive Tree) - Several left and centrist parties joined together in the L'Ulivo coalition for the elections in 1996 and 2001. L'Ulivo won the 1996 election (prime ministers were Romano Prodi und Massimo d'Alema), but was defeated in 2001 by the right-centre coalition "Casa delle Libertá" (House of the Liberties), led by current prime minister Silvio Berlusconi. The parties and coalitions currently belonging to L'Ulivo are: DS (Democratici di Sinistra); Margherita (coalition of: PPI (Partito Populare Italiano), Democratici, Rinnovamento Italiano, UDEUR (Unione Democratici per l'Europa)); Verdi; SDI (Socialisti Democratici Italiani); PdCI (Partito dei Comunisti Italiani).
The symbol of L'Ulivo is a circle of white blending into light blue at the bottom, in the centre the inscription "L'ULIVO" in blue (the apostrophe red), and a green olive twig. The flag is a blueish green with the symbol in the center.
Sources:
- own observations at the 1st May 2001 and 2002 demos in Munich
- website of L'Ulivo at <www.ulivo.it>
Marcus Schmöger, 29 June 2002


The Union (L'Unione)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 4 December 2005

I wish to report a new Italian political flag that first came into use in early October 2005. L'Unione (= The Union) is the name of the new center-left wing coalition, which includes Left Democrats, Communist Refoundation Party, Italian Communists Party, The Daisy, Socialists and Union of Democrats for Europe. On October 9, a national rally took place here in Rome, to promote the primary elections for choosing the coalition's leader, held one week later. In my own experience, this was the first time that flags bearing the logo of the new coalition were seen. The flag measures 145 x 90 cm. Its colour is deep green, with the round logo placed in central position; the latter features the name of the coalition and a rainbow, on a white background that fades into pale blue in the lower half. The flag is printed on both sides (the logo and the lettering on the back are reversed).
Andrea Pollett, 27 October 2005

The logo of the Unione was already shown earlier this year by the leader of this coalition, see <www.corriere.it>. The flags, however, have come into use pretty recently, although somewheat earlier than suggested by Andrea Pollet. The first documented use of this flag is from the National Festival of Unity (Festa dell' Unità) at Milan 25 Aug- 19 Sep 2005. Photos of the use there can be found in the Italian news magazine L'Espresso (8 Sep 2005, p. 60; 29 Sep 2005, p. 67). There are also photos from the web that show the flag of L'Unione, see <www.festaunita.it>. The flag can be bought in the shop of the Left Democrats (DS), see <www.dsonline.it>.
Marcus Schmöger, 4 December 2005


Union Democrats for Europe (UDEUR - Unione Democratici per l'Europa)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 15 July 2002


image by Marcus Schmöger, 15 July 2002

Two logos of UDEUR (Unione Democratici per l'Europa) . It belongs to the left-center The Olive Tree (L'Ulivo) coalition (currently in opposition). All these parties belong to the sub-coalition "Margherita".
Marcus Schmöger, 15 July 2002

UDEUR ("Unione Democratici per l'Europa" = Union Democrats for Europe <www.udeur.org>) - The UDEUR is another small centrist, basically christian-democratic party. Founded in 1998 by several deputies formerly belonging to the center-right coalition, it supported the L'Ulivo government, and became part of the L'Ulivo coalition (Margherita sub-coalition) for the 2001 elections. The leader is Clemente Mastella. The seven deputies in the Camera dei Deputati were part of the Margherita group, but formed an own group in the mixed parliamentary group in July 2002; basically the same happened in the Senato, where five senators now form an UDEUR group in the mixed group.
The logo of the UDEUR comes in (at least) two variants: they show on a blue field a brown steeple, behind the steeple a wave in the national colors; at the top the inscriptions "UDEUR" and either "Popolari per l'Europa" or "Unione Democratici per l'Europa"; as a symbol of its affiliation to Europe either a circle of stars or the symbol of the European People's Party (a letter "E" in a circle of stars). Logos at: <digilander.iol.it/udeur> and <www.udeur.org>. I don't know if the UDEUR has a flag.
Marcus Schmöger, 1 August 2002


Unitarian Communists (Comunisti Unitari)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002

A left-wing federation
G. Vacca, 22 September 1997

Two groups split off from the RC (Communist Refoundation Party - Partito della Rifondazione Comunista) consecutively. The first (in 1995) were the "Comunisti Unitari" (Unitarian Communists), that joined DS (Democrats of the Left) in 1998. The logo of the "COMUNISTI UNITARI" was a blue circle with the name of the party (in white) under the red flag (with yellow star, hammer & sickle) partially covering the national flag. As the "Comunisti Unitari" were a short-lived party not very active in public, I'm not sure if they had a flag.
Marcus Schmöger, 2 August 2002


United Christian Democrats (CDU - Cristiani Democratici Uniti)


image by Marcus Schmöger, 15 July 2002

Logo of CDU - Cristiani Democratici Uniti. No flag found. CDU belongs to the right-center coalition House of the Liberties (Casa delle Libert?) led by prime minister Berlusconi.
Marcus Schmöger, 15 July 2002

CDU ("Cristiani Democratici Uniti" = United Christian Democrats <www.cdu.it>) - After the electoral defeat in 1994, the PPI majority wanted cooperation with the left coalition (led by the PDS), whereas a minority, including the party leader Rocco Buttiglione wanted to cooperate with the right coalition of Berlusconi. Subsequently the PPI split (involving some legal quarrels about the name etc), and the right part became known as CDU in July 1995. The short form has been deliberately chosen to resemble the German CDU. The current leader is Rocco Buttiglione. For the 1996 and the 2001 elections the CDU joined the center-right coalition of Berlusconi (together with the CCD).
I have not found any flag. The logo shows (on a blue background) the shield of the old "Democrazia Cristiana" (white shield, fimbriated red, a red cross and the white inscription "LIBERTAS" on the transverse bar of the cross) and the name of the party .The logo at <www.cdu.it/img/cmainbr.jpg>.
Marcus Schmöger, 7 August 2002


Workers Communist Party (PCL - Partito Comunista dei Lavoratori)


new pattern
image by Andrea Pollett, 28 April 2009


old pattern
image by Andrea Pollett, 28 April 2009

Partito Comunista dei Lavoratori (Workers Communist Party) - P.C.L.
In 2006 a trotskist faction of the Communist Refoundation Party broke off. Initially, the name of the independent faction was Movimento per il Partito Comunista dei Lavoratori (Movement for the Workers' Communist Party); in early 2008 the first congress was held, the actual party was founded and the name was shortened into the present one. The P.C.L. will  take part in the forthcoming European elections (June 2009) alone, i.e. without forming any coalition with other political forces.
The flag is red, with the round logo in central position. Two patterns of the logo are known, i.e. before and after the foundation congress. In the earlier version (2006-2007), a large red hammer & sickle symbol with black shadow overlaps a stylized pale blue (cyan) globe on white background; around the globe run the words "PARTITO COMUNISTA" (above) and "DEI LAVORATORI" (below) in red capital letters; only the bottom line is in italics style. A red crescent added to the left side of the logo reads "MOVIMENTO PER IL" in white capital letters. In the present version of the logo (2008- ), the red hammer & sickle symbol throws its shadow in opposite direction, all the lettering around the globe is black, in non-italics style, the red crescent has been dropped, while in the lower hoist the words "per la 4ª internazionale" (for the 4th Internationale), in white lowercase letters, have been added. Due to these two lines of text, the logo is slightly shifted towards the upper rim.
The flag with the old version can be seen here.
Andrea Pollett, 28 April 2009