Liga Veneta Repubblica (Łiga Vèneta Republica, Venetian Republic League, LVR) is a Venetistpolitical party in Veneto, Italy. The party maintains a mildly separatist position and campaigns for the self-government of Veneto.
The LVR emerged in 1998 as a split from Liga Veneta (LV), the "national section" of Lega Nord in Veneto. Originally named Liga Veneta Repubblica, it changed its name to Veneti d'Europa (after the merger with Future Veneto in 2000) and Liga Fronte Veneto (after the merger with Fronte Marco Polo in 2001). It finally assumed again the original title in 2007.
In 2000 the party included eight regional councillors, three deputies and four senators (all LV defectors).
History
Foundation and early years
In September 1998, after some clashes with Umberto Bossi, Fabrizio Comencini, national secretary of Liga Veneta (LV) since 1994, tried to lead the party out of Lega Nord (LN), a federation of regional parties. This move was opposed by Bossi's loyalists and he was finally expelled from the party and replaced by Gian Paolo Gobbo as leader of the LV.[1]
Despite the entity of the split among elects, most voters of the LV remained loyal to Gobbo and Bossi. In the 1999 European Parliament election the LVR won 3.5% of the vote in Veneto: a good result for a new party, but far less than the LV, which gained a disappointing 10.7% though, and far less than expected. However, the LVR had some local strongholds: San Bonifacio (20.9% over LV's 7.0% in 1998),[4]Schio (11.8% over 11.1% in 1999),[5]Arcole (44.1% over 6.0% in 1999),[6]Camisano Vicentino (21.6% over 5.9% in 1999),[7]Creazzo (15.5% over 14.7% in 1999),[8]Chiuppano (34.8% and elected mayor in 1999),[9]Monticello Conte Otto (14.6% over 7.2% in 1999),[10]Resana (24.6% over 7.8% in 1999),[11]Spresiano (62.2% over 9.1% and elected mayor in 1999)[12] and Torri di Quartesolo (15.8% in 1999).[13]
For the 2000 regional election, the LV entered an alliance with the Pole of Freedoms that excluded the LVR. The party, whose name was changed to Veneti d'Europa, won 2.4% (0.6% under the threshold needed), due to the presence of another Venetist party, Fronte Marco Polo (1.2%), and an electoral recovery of the LV (12.0%). The name Veneti d'Europa (Venetians for Europe) was chosen as the LVR merged with Future Veneto, member of the Autonomists for Europe, a federation of splinter groups from the LN.[14]
Liga Fronte Veneto and split
In 2001, the party, at the time led by the Venetist historian Beggiato, was merged with Fronte Marco Polo into the new Liga Fronte Veneto. Giorgio Vido was elected national secretary and Comencini national president. In 2001 general electionBepin Segato, a separatist activist in jail for having opposed Italian national unity, was a party candidate for the Senate.[15] Despite gaining more than 5.6% of the votes in Veneto (mainly disgruntled voters of the LN, after the alliance with Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia) and more than 10% in several single-seat constituencies, the party was not able to elect any representative to the Italian Parliament.
In 2003, Beggiato replaced Vido as national secretary in a time when the party was not represented in the institutions and was shrinking in popular support. In 2004 Beggiato tried to lead the party into North-East Project (PNE), even if PNE leader Giorgio Panto wanted LFV members to join not as a party but as individuals. Comencini ruled out the idea, that would have meant giving up the party's identity. After a tumultuous congress, a group led by Beggiato, Foggiato and Munaretto switched to PNE, while Comencini was elected national secretary and Morosin national president.
During this time, the party did occasionally better than the LV in local elections. This was the case of Cittadella in 2002 (14.9% over 5.5%) and San Bonifacio in 2004 (17.8% over 4.7%): in both cases, LFV candidates, Massimo Bitonci and Silvano Polo respectively, were elected mayors in run-offs.[16][17] Bitonci, who re-joined the LV, was re-elected in 2007,[18] while Polo did not stand for re-election and the LFV supported the defeated centre-left candidate.[19]
Decline and more splits
In the 2005 regional election, the party supported the centre-left candidate for president, Massimo Carraro, winning only 1.2% of the vote, while PNE won 5.4% (16.1% in the Province of Treviso), and being excluded again from the Regional Council. For the 2006 general election Comencini forged an alliance with The Union coalition led by Romano Prodi, but voters seemed to not like the idea and the party stopped at 0.7%.
In the 2007 provincial election of Vicenza, the LFV supported Giorgio Carollo, along with parties both from the centre-left and the centre-right: Veneto for the EPP, Italy of Values, UDEUR, Christian Democracy. Carollo scored 9.9%, while the LFV took only 1.6%, compared with 2.3% of PNE and 19.0% of the LV, whose candidate Attilio Schneck was elected President by a landslide. Soon after the election the party returned to its original name, Liga Veneta Repubblica, under which it ran in the 2008 general election.
In October 2008, the LVR signed a coalition pact with North-East Project (PNE) and Venetian Agreement (IV) for the next municipal, provincial and regional elections "in order to provide an adequate representation to the Venetian people, in line with what happens in Europe, from Scotland to Catalonia, from Wales to Brittany, where federalist, autonomist and independentist parties, who respond uniquely to their territory, see their popular support increasing."[20] However, in the 2009 provincial and municipal election the LVR chose to support the candidates of the Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (UDC), having its best result in the Province of Padua (1.6%).[21]
In March 2014, the party was a founding member of United for Independent Veneto, a more structured federation of Venetist and separatist parties, including also VS, Independent Venetians (VI) and Valdegamberi's Popular Future (FP).[29][30] In July 2014 the coalition was transformed into "We Independent Veneto" (NVI), after the entry of other parties, notably including North-East Project and Chiavegato for Independence.[31][32]
In May 2017, Comencini and other INV leaders were briefly members of Great North (GN), a liberal and federalist party.[41][42]
Sometime in 2018, Comencini stepped down as secretary, being replaced by Gianluigi Sette and becoming president instead.
In the 2019 local elections, the LVR stood with its own lists in San Bonifacio, Negrar and Arzignano.[43]
Back with Liga Veneta
For the 2020 regional election, the party entered in alliance with the LV for the first time since the 1998 split. In the election, the LV sponsors three lists, its own, Luca Zaia's personal list and the "Venetian Autonomy List", whose logo is the LVR's one with minor modifications, especially "List" instead of "Liga" and the "Autonomy" banner in the lower part, along with LVR's acronym.[44] The LVR obtained 2.4% of the vote, electing Tomas Piccinini to the Regional Council.
Popular support
The electoral results of the party in Veneto in the regional and general elections for the Senate since 1999 are shown in the chart below.
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
^This result refers to the combined result of the LVR (2.4%) and Fronte Marco Polo (1.2%).
^This result refers to proportional representation; in single-seat constituencies the party won 5.6%.
^The party was able to present its list only in the Veneto 1 constituency (Padua–Verona–Vicenza–Rovigo), where it gained 1.7% of the vote, while it was not present in Veneto 2 (Venice–Treviso–Belluno), thus winning 1.0% regionally; the party won 1.7% for the Senate, in the single regional constituency.