The Italian Socialists
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| The Italian Socialists | |
|---|---|
| Founded | 7 February 2006 |
| Dissolved | 5 October 2007 |
| Newspaper | none |
| Membership (2006) | 18,700[1] |
| Ideology | Social democracy |
| International | none |
| European party | none |
| European Parliament Group | none |
The Italian Socialists (I Socialisti Italiani) was a minor Italian political party, born on February 7, 2006 as the result of a split in the New Italian Socialist Party wing favourable to a political alliance with The Union and an immediate discontinuance of ties with the House of Freedoms. The party was originally led by Vittorio "Bobo" Craxi, son of the late leader of the Italian Socialist Party, Bettino Craxi.
Because of the ambiguity inherent in presenting a symbol with a carnation and the name "Craxi" in the centre-left coalition, whereas the New Italian Socialist Party is located on the centre-right (including Bobo's sister Stefania Craxi, member of Forza Italia), the ministry of Internal Affairs asked Bobo Craxi to remove his surname and the carnation from the symbol. As the symbol would have been unrecognizable at that point, Craxi himself was inserted on the lists of the Democrats of the Left.
At the elections of April 2006, The Socialists presented themselves as a member of The Union coalition with its leader a candidate on the lists of the Democrats of the Left. However, it decided not to join the social-radical project of Rose in the Fist. Although the list ran its own candidates and presented its own symbol, they faced many odds. The new symbol which removed the name "Craxi" inevitably lost the party votes.
After the votes were counted The Socialists received unpromising results; 0.3% for the House of Deputies and 0.36% for the Senate. The party saw none of its members elected and even Bobo Craxi, who had run on the Democrats of the Left list, was not elected, leaving The Socialist party with no representation in Parliament. However, the centre-left coalition won the election and in the new Cabinet of Romano Prodi Bobo Craxi became under-secretary for the Foreign Office.[1]
The first party convention, held in March 2007 elected unanimously Saverio Zavettieri as party secretary and deliberated the change of denomination from The Socialists to The Italian Socialists. The party also discussed and rejected the opportunity to join the Democratic Party, which was founded on 14 October 2007.
In July 2007 the party decided to merge into the new Socialist Party, which was launched on 5 October 2007.

