Free Alternative

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Free Alternative
Alternativa Libera
Leader Massimo Artini
Founded January 2015
Split from Five Star Movement
Ideology Populism
Direct democracy
Political position Left-wing
National affiliation with Possible
Chamber of Deputies
5 / 630
Senate
0 / 315
Website
www.alternativalibera.org
Politics of Italy
Political parties
Elections

Free Alternative (Alternativa Libera, AL) is a left-wing populist political party in Italy, active mainly as a sub-group within the Mixed Group of the Chamber of Deputies, along with Possible, another left-wing party.

The party, formed by splinters of the Five Star Movement, originally included both left-wing, centrist and right-wing elements.

History

The party was launched in January 2015 by ten deputies who had left (or had been expelled from) the Five Star Movement (M5S),[1] a populist party which had come first in the 2013 general election, over disagreements with Beppe Grillo's and Gianroberto Casaleggio's leadership. According to AL's leader, Walter Rizzetto, at its foundation, the party counted also on seven senators[2] (possibly including Italy Work in Progress and the X Movement), but the notion was never confirmed by the Senate's website and other news sources. Besides Rizzetto, the other main leader of the party was Massimo Artini.[3]

In April Gessica Rostellato, one of the party's ten deputies, left in order to join the Democratic Party[4][5][6] and, a few days later, was replaced by Toni Matarrelli, a splinter from Left Ecology Freedom, in the group.[7][8]

As of mid July, the party looked divided between its left-wing, led by Artini, whose members had been crescently involved in a dialogue with Giuseppe Civati and were pondering over joining his Possible party,[9] and its right-wing, led by Rizzetto, a conservative liberal,[10] who had been building bridges with Lega Nord and Brothers of Italy (FdI) instead.[11][12]

In November the majority of the party (including six deputies: Massimo Artini, Marco Baldassarre, Eleonora Bechis, Toni Matarrelli, Samuele Segoni and Tancredi Turco), finally joined forces with Possible and formed a joint sub-group within the Mixed Group of the Chamber. This inevitably caused the split of four deputies (Walter Rizzetto, Sebastiano Barbanti, Mara Mucci and Aris Prodani).[13][14][15] In the meantime, it was announced that Rizzetto would participate in the creation of Our Land, a right-wing party that would be established from the ashes of FdI by January 2016.[16] Differently both from the party's majority and Rizzetto, Barbanti, Mucci and Prodani looked set to join the centre-left Democratic Party.[13] Shortly after, Matarrelli directly joined Possible.[17]

References

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