Lega Lombarda (English: Lombard League; abbr. LL), whose complete name is Lega Lombarda per Salvini Premier (English: Lombard League for Salvini Premier), is a regionalistpolitical party active in Lombardy. Established in 1984, it was one of the founding "national" sections of Lega Nord (LN) in 1991 and has been the regional section of Lega per Salvini Premier (LSP) in Lombardy since 2020. Along with Liga Veneta, the LL has formed the bulk of the federal party (LN/LSP), which has been led by Lombards since its foundation.
On 12 April 1984 the Lega Autonomista Lombarda (Lombard Autonomist League, LAL) was officially established by Bossi, who used the resonance of the name of the historical Lega Lombarda when choosing the name, Giuseppe Leoni, Manuela Marrone (Bossi's future wife), Pierangelo Brivio (Marrone's brother-in-law), Marino Moroni and Emilio Sogliaghi, but not Maroni who had taken a hiatus from politics and would return in 1989. In the 1984 European Parliament election, the LL joined forces with the LV, the Trentino Tyrolean People's Party, the Piedmontese Union and other minor parties, obtaining 0.5% of the vote countrywide and 0.7% in the province of Varese (the LV was stronger than the LL at the time). In the 1985 regional election the LL won 0.5% of the vote.
In 1989–1990 the LL took part in the process of federating the northern regionalist parties, ahead of the regional elections. The LL was the most voted among the new regional parties, with 18.9% of the vote in the 1990 Lombard regional election (the LV was riven in internal conflicts at the time and especially suffered the competition of Green lists and the Union of the Venetian People).
In February 1991 the LL finally was merged with the five parties of the LL–AN alliance and newly-formed parties in the northern autonomous regions and provinces (the future Lega Vallée d'Aoste, Lega Alto Adige Südtirol, Lega Trentino, Lega Friuli and Lega Trieste) into Lega Nord (LN). Since then, the LL has been the "national" section of the LN in Lombardy. Bossi was subsequently elected federal secretary of the LN, while maintaining the role of national secretary of the LL for a while.
In the 1992 general election the LN obtained 8.7% of the vote countrywide, of which 23.0% in Lombardy, and dozens of LL members were elected to the Chamber and Senate.
Negri, Calderoli, Giorgetti
In 1993 Luigi Negri took over as secretary, replacing Bossi,[14][15][16] who had to choose between national and federal office.
After the 1994 general election, in which the LN ran within Silvio Berlusconi's Pole of Freedoms coalition, three LL members joined Berlusconi's government as ministers: Maroni (the party's recognised number two), Vito Gnutti and Speroni. In December, Bossi chose to leave the government over pension reform. The break-up of the coalition supporting the government and its replacement by Lamberto Dini's "technocratic" government, thanks to the LN's support, led Negri and others to defect to the Federalist Italian League[17][18] or the Federalists and Liberal Democrats, while Maroni, despite disagreements with Bossi, chose to stay in the party and was warmly re-welcomed by Bossi.
Negri was replaced as secretary by Roberto Calderoli,[19] grandnewphew of Guido Calderoli, who, as president,[20] had evicted him from the party, despite being his brother-in-law.[21] Calderoli led the party to its best result up to that point in the 1996 general election, when it gained 25.5%.[22]
After the 2000 regional election, the party joined the regional government and has since been a member of it, with no exceptions. After the 2001 general election, three LL members joined Berlusconi's government as ministers: Bossi (who would later have health problems and be replaced by Calderoli), Maroni and Roberto Castelli.
In 2012 Giorgetti decided to step down from national secretary and the party elected its new leadership at a congress in June. Matteo Salvini ran as candidate of the faction around Roberto Maroni,[25][26] while Cesarino Monti, a former mayor and senator, was the candidate of the old guard and of Bossi's loyalists.[27][28] Salvini won the election with 74% of the votes, that is to say the support of 403 delegates out of 532.[29][30] Soon after, Giorgetti was appointed national president.
In November 2013 Salvini succeeded to Maroni as Lega Nord's federal secretary and, later on, he appointed a commissioner, Stefano Borghesi, to fill the post. Borghesi was later replaced by Grimoldi.[34][35] In November 2015 Grimoldi was elected national secretary of the party.[36][37][38]
In May 2017, after Salvini's re-election as LN federal secretary, five LL members (Bordonali, Fabrizio Cecchetti, Giulio De Capitani, Simona Pergreffi and Jacopo Vignati) were elected to the federal council with Salvini, a sixth (Giorgetti) was elected as an independent and a seventh (Gianni Fava) on behalf of the minority.[39][40] In December Stucchi was elected president of LL,[41] replacing Giorgetti, who whose more and more involved at the federal level as deputy of Salvini.
In the 2018 regional election LL's Attilio Fontana was elected President of Lombardy with 49.8% of the vote and the party obtained 29.4%. Contextually, in the 2018 general election the party won 28.0% of the vote and Salvini, as deputy prime minister and minister of the Interior, plus other two LL members would serve in Giuseppe Conte's first government until September 2019. In 2021 the party would join Mario Draghi's government with two LL members, Giorgetti as minister of Economic Development and Massimo Garavaglia as minister of Tourism.
Re-foundation
Following the formation of Lega per Salvini Premier and the 2019 federal congress of the LN, after which the latter became practically inactive, in February 2020 the LL was re-established as Lega Lombarda per Salvini Premier in order to become the regional section of the new party. The founding members of the new LL were Attilio Fontana, Paolo Grimoldi, Daniele Belotti, Stefano Borghesi, Fabrizio Cecchetti e Gian Marco Centinaio.[42] Grimoldi continued to led the party through 2020.
In February 2021 Cecchetti replaced Grimoldi as pro-tempore coordinator.[43] Grimoldi would become a frequent critic of the political line of the federal party, perceived to be too Rome-centric.[44][45][46] After the disappointing result 2022 general election, in which the party was reduced to 13.3% of the vote in Lombardy, some leading members of the party's traditional wing, rooted in Padanian nationalism, formed Comitato Nord (English: Northern Committee, CN).[47] The Committee was inspired by Umberto Bossi and, under the leadership of Grimoldi and Angelo Ciocca, it attracted more than one thousand members in a couple of months.[48] The inaugural event of the Committee, held in early December, was attended by some 600 people, including former ministers Roberto Castelli and Francesco Speroni.[49][50][51][52] Contextually, provincial congresses were held in some of the party's strongholds: critics of Salvini affiliated with the CN narrowly won in Bergamo and Brescia, while the pro-Salvini wing retained Varese for a handful of votes.[53][54] In November 2023, Castelli started his own People's Party of the North.[55]
In the meantime, the party joined Giorgia Meloni's government with five LL ministers, including Salvini as deputy prime minister and minister of Infrastructure and Transport and Giorgetti as minister of Economy and Finance. A few months later, in the 2023 regional election, Fontana was re-elected with 54.6% of the vote, but the party won 22.7% (combined result of party list and Fontana's personal list), coming second to Brothers of Italy (FdI), which thus obtained a large share of the regional government[56] and one of its members at the head of the Regional Council.[57]
Popular support
The party has its heartland in the northern and mountain provinces of Lombardy.
In the 2018 regional election it won 45.8% in Sondrio, 34.4% in Brescia, 36.7% in Bergamo, 33.4% in Lecco, 32.6% in Como and 30.9% in Varese (the party's cradle and original stronghold). However, the party obtained good results also in southern provinces, notably 33.4% in Lodi and 33.0% in Cremona.
The electoral results of Lega Lombarda in the region since 1989 are shown in the tables below.