Leadership Following the defeat of fascism, Almirante was indicted on charges that he ordered the shooting of partisans in 1944, although a general amnesty saw this lifted. He fled Italy after the war but returned in 1946 to set up his own small fascist group. It was quickly absorbed into the
Italian Social Movement (MSI), which was set up the same year. Representing a radical faction within the party, Almirante's group lost ground as more moderate elements gained influence in the party; this tendency soon gained the upper hand, forcing Almirante to give way to
Augusto De Marsanich as leader in 1950. He had intimated his support for the
Europe a nation ideas prevalent at the time, but failed to convince the party to take a position against De Marsanich's pro-
NATO policy.
Opposition During the mid-1950s, Almirante, disquieted by the drift towards
conservatism under De Marsanich and his successor
Arturo Michelini, resigned his position on the National Council to become a critic of the leadership. He emphasised the
proletarian origins of fascism against the new conservatism and argued for 'quality' rather than 'quantity' in government, endorsing expert-driven elites instead of
liberal democracy. However, he stopped short of the route taken by the other leading dissident
Pino Rauti by remaining within the party. In his role as leader of the internal opposition, Almirante was not averse to employing the tactics of the
Blackshirts, and indeed in 1968 he was one of three leaders of a 'punitive expedition' against student radicals at the Fine Arts Department at the
University of Rome. However, Almirante and some 200 followers were routed and, in the end, were protected by the police.
Return to the leadership Almirante regained the leadership of the party in 1969 following the death of Michelini. By now, his own opinions had shifted somewhat towards a more moderate position as he soon declared his own support for democracy. On this basis, he aimed to attract more conservative elements to the MSI, while simultaneously passing reforms that strengthened the power of the party secretary in order to pre-empt opposition from the radical tendency with which he had been associated. He also sought to 'historicise' fascism and dropped the more overt references to the ideology from MSI propaganda and rhetoric, notably shelving the black shirt and the
Roman salute. His new policy, known as the
strategia del doppio binario (double track strategy), was not aimed at making the MSI more palatable to the
Christian Democrats, as had been the plan of his predecessor, but rather to move the MSI into that party's ideological space and so challenge them directly for the leadership of the right. Almirante felt that by placing
anti-communism at the heart of the MSI's appeal the party could attract both its existing followers and more moderate conservatives and could in time rival Christian Democrats as the main party of the right. As part of this policy he brought in a number of disparate rightist groups, merging the MSI with the
Italian Democratic Party of Monarchist Unity, readmitting the hard-line splinter group
Ordine Nuovo (New Order), and adding establishment figures such as Admiral Gino Birindelli and General Giovanni de Lorenzo as members. However, the policy floundered as the MSI made few inroads into Christian Democrat support and instead pushed the mainstream right towards an accommodation with the
Italian Communist Party. As a consequence, some of the moderate faction split off to form the
National Democracy in 1977. On 18 June 1973 around noon, on his way back from a political rally, Almirante with three party comrades stopped at a Motta restaurant (now
Autogrill) on A1 motorway Cantagallo rest area, in
Casalecchio di Reno near
Bologna, near where the
Marzabotto massacre had occurred less than 29 years ago. When a waiter recognized him, the restaurant staff called their union, and declaring themselves anti-fascists, they went on a strike, refusing to serve Almirante or anyone else until he left, forcing him to leave. As many as 16 staff members went on trial for the incident (for which they were acquitted). A Bologna-based leftist musical group, "Canzoniere delle lame", released the single "All'armi... siam digiuni... (al Cantagallo)", the proceeds were used to pay the staff's legal fees. In 1975 he travelled to the USA where he met with members of the
National Security Council at the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building. Despite the policy's failure to deliver at the ballot box, under Almirante's leadership the MSI did emerge to an extent from the political ghetto, a shift demonstrated in 1984 when Almirante was allowed to enter the headquarters of the Communist Party in order to pay respects to their dead leader
Enrico Berlinguer, a gesture that had been unimaginable for an MSI leader. However, his newly moderate approach brought him into conflict with Rauti and clashes between the two became a feature of the annual party conference. Almirante also served the MSI in parliament, although he was stripped of parliamentary immunity three times: in 1979, he was charged with trying to revive the Fascist Party; and in 1981 and also in 1984, he was charged with aiding and abetting
Carlo Cicuttini, who had fled Italy after a 1972 Peteano car bomb that killed three policemen. However, Almirante received amnesty under a 1987 law. == Retirement ==