The Network 2018

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Network_2018 an entity of type: Thing

The Network 2018 (Italian: La Rete 2018) was a centre-left political party in Italy led by Leoluca Orlando, former leading member of Christian Democracy in Sicily, founder of The Network and The Democrats, and five-time mayor of Palermo. The party, which considered itself a re-foundation of The Network (established, among others, by Orlando in 1991), was launched in 2011 and caused a split from Italy of Values (IdV) in 2013. Along Orlando, splinters from IdV notably included , a former member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Niccolò Rinaldi, a former member of the European Parliament. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Network 2018
rdf:langString The Network 2018
rdf:langString La Rete 2018
rdf:langString The Network 2018
xsd:integer 48414248
xsd:integer 1117840070
xsd:date 2018-01-26
rdf:langString Italy
xsd:date 2011-03-21
rdf:langString RC
rdf:langString La Rete 2018
rdf:langString Centre-left to left-wing
rdf:langString The Network 2018 (Italian: La Rete 2018) was a centre-left political party in Italy led by Leoluca Orlando, former leading member of Christian Democracy in Sicily, founder of The Network and The Democrats, and five-time mayor of Palermo. The party, which considered itself a re-foundation of The Network (established, among others, by Orlando in 1991), was launched in 2011 and caused a split from Italy of Values (IdV) in 2013. Along Orlando, splinters from IdV notably included , a former member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Niccolò Rinaldi, a former member of the European Parliament. In 2013 Orlando launched a parallel party named 139 Movement along with two other leading IdV dissidents, (former IdV floor leader in the Senate) and (regional councillor in Abruzzo). The name was a reference to the 139 articles of the Constitution of Italy. In the 2017 Italian local elections in Palermo the M139 obtained 8.6% of the vote, enough to be the largest party of the fractured local centre-left coalition. In 2018 Orlando and his closest allies, notably including his deputy mayor Giambrone, joined the Democratic Party. For their part, Rinaldi returned to his original affiliation to the Italian Republican Party, Belisario abandoned active politics and Costantini joined Action.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6878
xsd:date 2018-01-26
xsd:gYear 2018
xsd:date 2011-03-21
xsd:gYear 2011

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