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  1. Description Flag of the National Fascist Party (PNF).svg. English: Flag of the National Fascist Party (Partito Nazionale Fascista) from 1927 to 1943. There were variations of the flag with different styles of fasces, this image shows one of those styles. A variant of the flag can be seen flying atop of a building in the Italian film titled "L ...

  2. However, fascist elements attempted a coup in September 1938, which was ruthlessly put down at the Seguro Obrero massacre, and led Ibáñez to oppose the National Socialists' choice of Gustavo Ross, leading to indirect support of the Radical Party's candidate, Pedro Aguirre Cerda, who narrowly won the election.

  3. During the National Fascist Congress in May 1920, Carli and Marinetti walked out in disgust, denouncing fascism as "reactionary." This was the final conclusion to a split which had emerged within the Futurist party itself during the early months of 1920.

  4. Formation. The party was founded in 2016, by Justin Barrett as party president and James Reynolds as party vice president. The National Party had planned to hold its press launch in the Merrion Hotel in Dublin but the event was cancelled by the hotel, [10] which subsequently said it had done so for "public safety reasons". [11] There had been ...

  5. The National Front was a far-right party in Switzerland that flourished during the 1930s. At its peak the group had as many as 9,000 members, according to the Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, [1] and "may have had a membership of 25,000 or so", according to the Simon Wiesenthal Center. [2] The party was financed by the Reich Ministry of ...

  6. The National Fascist Union ( Unión Nacional Fascista, UNF) was a fascist political party formed in Argentina in 1936, as the successor to the Argentine Fascist Party. [2] In August 1936, UNF leader Nimio de Anquín attempted to force students at a law school in Cordoba to pledge a statement of support for the Spanish general Francisco Franco. [3]

  7. The NOF instead looked to Italy as its model, and based itself wholly on Mussolini's National Fascist Party. In this respect it differed markedly from its chief rival Vlajka, which was firmly in the Hitler camp. Groups targeted by the NOF for criticism included the Jews, communists, the Czechoslovak government and the Magyars.