Foundation National Alliance was launched in 1994 when the
Italian Social Movement (MSI), the former
neo-fascist party, merged with conservative elements of the former
Christian Democracy, which had disbanded in 1994 after two years of scandals and various splits due to
political corruption at its highest levels, exposed by the
Mani pulite investigation, and the
Italian Liberal Party, disbanded in the same year. It was officially launched in January 1995. Former MSI members dominated the new party, and the MSI's last leader,
Gianfranco Fini, was elected the new party's first leader. The AN logo followed a template very similar to that of the
Democratic Party of the Left, incorporating the MSI logo in a small roundel of the AN logo as a means of legally preventing others from using it. The name was suggested by an article on the Italian newspaper
Il Tempo written in 1992 by
Domenico Fisichella, a prominent conservative academic. Starting in the 1990s, the MSI gradually transformed into a mainstream
right-wing party, culminating in its 1995 dissolution into AN.
Government participation in 2004 The party was part of all three
House of Freedoms coalition governments led by
Silvio Berlusconi. Fini was nominated Deputy Prime Minister after the
2001 Italian general election and was Foreign Minister from November 2004 to May 2006. When Fini visited
Israel in late November 2003 in the function of Italian Deputy Prime Minister, he labelled the racial laws issued by the
Italian fascism regime in 1938 as "infamous", as also
Giorgio Almirante, historic leader of MSI, had done before. He also referred to the
Italian Social Republic as belonging to the most shameful pages of the past, and considered fascism part of an era of "absolute evil", something which was hardly acceptable to the few remaining hardliners of the party. As a result,
Alessandra Mussolini, the granddaughter of the former fascist dictator
Benito Mussolini, who had been at odds with the party on a number of issues for a long time, and some hardliners left the party and formed
Social Action. In occasion of the
2006 Italian general election, AN ran within the House of Freedoms, with new allies. The centre-right lost by 24,000 votes in favour of the centre-left coalition
The Union. Individually, AN received nearly 5 million votes, amounting to 12.3%. In July 2007, a group of splinters led by
Francesco Storace formed
The Right, which was officially founded on 10 November. Seven MPs of AN, including
Teodoro Buontempo and
Daniela Santanchè, joined the new party.
The People of Freedom In November 2007,
Silvio Berlusconi announced that Forza Italia would have soon merged or transformed into
The People of Freedom (PdL) party. After the sudden fall of the
Prodi II Cabinet in January 2008, the break-up of
The Union and the subsequent political crisis which led to a fresh general election, Berlusconi hinted that Forza Italia would have probably contested its last election and the new party would have been officially founded only after that election. In an atmosphere of reconciliation with Gianfranco Fini, Berlusconi also stated that the new party could see the participation of other parties. Finally, on 8 February, Berlusconi and Fini agreed to form a joint list under the PdL banner, allied with
Lega Nord (LN). After the victory of the PdL in the
2008 Italian general election, AN was merged into the PdL in early 2009. During AN's last congress, it was decided that a
foundation would manage the assets and the political legacy of MSI/AN; as a result, in 2011 the National Alliance Foundation was established. In 2014 the Foundation, which has been successively led by
Franco Pontone,
Franco Mugnai and
Giuseppe Valentino, gave the
Brothers of Italy (FdI), a political party formed by former AN members who had splintered from the PdL and who were led by La Russa and
Giorgia Meloni, the authorisation to use AN's symbol. Former AN members have since been active in several parties, but mostly in FdI, however the Foundation continues to have former AN members of all ideological stripes in its ranks, including those who are now members of the new
Forza Italia, the new
Lega and the most-recently formed
Independence. ==Ideology==