List of fascist movements by country G–M
(Redirected from List of fascist movements by country G-M)
A list of political parties, organizations, and movements adhering to various forms of fascist ideology, part of the list of fascist movements by country.
Fascist movements, sorted by country
editLogo | Name of movement | Country of predominant operation | Came to power? | Founded post-World War II? | Active? | General influence | Flag | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Action Front of National Socialists/National Activists | Germany | No | Yes (1977) | No | Nazism | |
Banned in 1983 | ||
Artgemeinschaft | Germany | No | Yes (1951) | Yes | Esoteric Nazism | ||||
Black Front | Germany | No | No (1930) | No | Strasserism | Banned in 1933 | |||
Deutsche Heidnische Front | Germany | No | Yes (1998) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
German Reich Party | Germany | No | Yes (1950) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
Free German Workers' Party[1] | Germany | No | Yes (1977) | No | Neo-Nazism/Strasserism | |
Split in the late 1980s; banned 1995 | ||
German Alternative | Germany | No | Yes (1989) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
German Social Union | Germany | No | Yes (1956) | No | Strasserism | ||||
German Workers' Party | Germany | No | No (1919) | No | Völkism | Succeeded by the National Socialist German Workers' Party | |||
Military-sports-group Hoffmann | Germany | Yes | Yes (1973) | No | Neo-Nazism | Fascist terrorist gang | |||
National Socialist German Workers' Party | Germany | Yes | No (1920) | No | Nazism | Succeeded by the Socialist Reich Party (de facto) | |||
Nationalist Front[2] | Germany | No | Yes (1985) | No | Strasserism | Banned in 1992. | |||
National Offensive | Germany | No | Yes (1990) | No | Neo-Nazism | Banned in 1992. | |||
National Democratic Party of Germany | Germany | No | Yes | Yes | Neo-Nazism | |
|||
The Immortals | Germany | No | Yes | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
The III. Path | Germany | No | Yes (2013) | Yes | Neo-Nazism | ||||
The Right | Germany | No | Yes (2012) | Yes | Neo-Nazism | |
|||
Socialist Reich Party | Germany | No | Yes (1949) | No | Neo-Nazism | Fragmented from German Empire Party; banned 1952 | |||
Wiking-Jugend | Germany | No | Yes (1952) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
HIAG | West Germany | No | Yes (1951) | No | Neo-Nazism | Fragmented from German Empire Party; banned 1952 | |||
Front Line | Greece | No | Yes (1999) | No | Metaxism | ||||
General Popular Radical Union | Greece | Yes | No (1932) | No | independent, Italian fascism | Led by Georgios Kondylis | |||
Golden Dawn | Greece | No | Yes (1980) | Yes | Metaxism,[3][4][5] Neo-Nazism | ||||
Greek National Socialist Party[6] | Greece | No | No (1932) | No | Nazism | Founded by George S. Mercouris | |||
Hellenic Socialist Patriotic Organisation | Greece | No | No (1941) | No | Nazism | ||||
National Party – Greeks | Greece | No | Yes (2020) | de facto banned | Neo-fascism | Split from Golden Dawn | |||
National Political Union | Greece | No | Yes (1984) | No | Metaxism | Founded by Georgios Papadopoulos | |||
National Popular Consciousness | Greece | No | Yes (2019) | No | Metaxism, Neo-Nazism | Split from Golden Dawn | |||
National Reform Party | Greece | No | No (1935) | No | Italian fascism | ||||
National Union of Greece[7] | Greece | No | No (1927) | No | independent | ||||
Freethinkers' Party[8] | Greece | No (its leader did) | No (1922) | No | Metaxism | The political party led by future Greek dictator Ioannis Metaxas | |||
Spartans | Greece | No | Yes (2017) | Yes | Neo-fascism | National Party merged into them | |||
National Unity Party | Haiti | Yes | Yes (1957) | No | Tropical fascism | Founded by François Duvalier | |||
Arrow Cross Party | Hungary | Yes | No (1935) | No | Hungarist | Founded as “Party of National Will” | |||
Christian National Socialist Front | Hungary | No | No (1937) | No | Nazism | ||||
Hungarian National Socialist Agricultural Labourers' and Workers' Party | Hungary | No | No (1932) | No | Nazism | ||||
Hungarian National Defence Association[6] | Hungary | No | No (1919) | No | independent/Italian Fascism | Also known as Szeged Fascists | |||
Hungarian National Front | Hungary | No | Yes (1989) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
Hungarian National Socialist Party[6] | Hungary | No | No (1920s–1930s) | No | independent/Nazism | Name used by several groups | |||
National Front | Hungary | No | No (1936) | No | Nazism | ||||
Pax Hungarica Movement | Hungary | No | Yes (2008) | No | Neo-Nazism | ||||
United Hungarian National Socialist Party | Hungary | No | No (1932) | No | Nazism | ||||
Unity Party | Hungary | Yes | No (2008) | No | Szeged Idea | ||||
Nationalist Party[9] | Iceland | No | No (1934) | No | light Fascism | ||||
Aria Party[10] | Iran | No | Yes (1946) | No | independent | ||||
Azure Party | Iran | No | No (1942) | No | Fascism, Nazism | ||||
Nation Party of Iran | Iran | No | Yes (1951) | Yes | independent | |
|||
Pan-Iranist Party | Iran | No | No (1941) | Yes | Independent | ||||
Sumka | Iran | No | Yes (1952) | Yes | Nazism | Founded by Dr. Davud Monshizadeh in December 6, 1941 (unofficially) or October 13, 1952 (officially) | |||
Resurgence Party | Iran | Yes | Yes (1975) | No | Fascism[11][12] | ||||
Al-Muthanna Club | Iraq | No | No (1935) | No | Nazism | Founded by former Iraqi cabinet minister Saib Shawkat | |||
Ailtirí na hAiséirghe ("Architects of the Resurrection")[13] | Ireland | No | No (1942) | No | Fascism, Irish nationalism | Founded by Gearóid Ó Cuinneagáin | |||
Córas na Poblachta ("Republican System") | Ireland | No | No (1940) | No | Fascism, Irish nationalism | ||||
National Socialist Irish Workers Party | Ireland | No | Yes (1968) | No | Neo-Nazism | Dissolved in late 1980s | |||
National Corporate Party | Ireland | No | No (1934) | No | Clerical Fascism | Member of the Fascist International | |||
Army Comrades Association | Ireland | No | No (1932) | No | Fascism, Irish nationalism | Founded by Eoin O'Duffy, better known as the Blueshirts | |||
Brit HaBirionim | Israel (then the British Mandate of Palestine) | No | No (1930) | No | Italian Fascism, Revisionist Maximalism | Founded by of Dr. Abba Ahimeir, Uri Zvi Greenberg and Dr. Joshua Yeivin. | |||
Kach/Kahane Chai | Israel | No | Yes (1971) | No | Kahanism, Halachic state, Zionism | Founded by Rabbi Meir Kahane, banned in 1994. | |||
Lehi[14][15][16][17] | Israel (then the British Mandate of Palestine) | No | No (1940) | No | Fascism,[14][15][17][18] Revisionist Zionism, National Bolshevism[19] | ||||
Patrol 36 | Israel | No | Yes (2005) | No | Neo-Nazism, Antisemitism | ||||
Armed Revolutionary Nuclei | Italy | No | Yes (1977) | No | Italian Fascism | Terrorist organization | |||
CasaPound | Italy | No | Yes (2003) | Yes | Italian Fascism | Founded by Gianluca Iannone | |||
Fascism and Freedom Movement | Italy | No | Yes (1991) | Yes | Italian Fascism | Founded by Giorgio Pisanò | |||
Fasci Italiani di Combattimento | Italy | No | No (1919) | No | Italian Fascism | Succeeded by PNF | |||
Forza Nuova | Italy | No | Yes | Yes | Italian Fascism | ||||
Fronte Sociale Nazionale | Italy | No | Yes (1997) | Yes | Italian Fascism | Broke from Tricolour Flame; member of Alternativa Sociale | |||
Italian Social Movement | Italy | No | Yes (1946) | No | Italian Fascism | MSI | |||
National Fascist Party (PNF) | Italy | Yes | No (1921) | No | Italian Fascism | Disbanded 1943; succeeded by PFR | |||
National Vanguard (PNF) | Italy | Yes | Yes (1960) | No | Neo-Nazism | Took part in Golpe Borghese | |||
Ordine Nuovo | Italy | No | Yes (1956) | No | Italian Fascism | Terrorist organization | |||
Ordine Nero | Italy | No | Yes (1974) | No | Italian Fascism | Terrorist organization | |||
Republican Fascist Party (PFR) | Italy (RSI) | Yes | No (1943) | No | Italian Fascism | Disbanded 1945; succeeded by MSI | |||
Terza Posizione | Italy | No | Yes (1979) | No | Independent | Disbanded 1980 | |||
Tricolour Flame | Italy | No | Yes (1995) | Yes | Italian Fascism | Splinter group of MSI | |||
National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party | Japan | No | Yes | Yes | Neo-Nazism | ||||
Imperial Aid Association | Japan | Yes | No (1940) | No | Japanese imperialism, Japanese militarism, Japanese ultranationalism, National conservatism, Pan-Asianism | Dissolved in 1945 | |||
Tohokai ("Eastern Society") | Japan | No | No (1936) | No | Japanese fascism | In October 1940 it briefly merged into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association which it later broke away from in 1941, banned after the war. | |||
Korean National Youth Association | Korea | No | Yes (1946) | No | Fascism | ||||
Pērkonkrusts[9] | Latvia | No | No (1932) | Yes | Independent | Banned after 1944; reformed after the resumption of Latvian independence | |||
German National Movement in Liechtenstein | Liechtenstein | No | No (1938) | No | Nazism | ||||
Liechtenstein Homeland Service | Liechtenstein | No | No (1933) | No | Corporate statism, Nazism (later)[20] | ||||
Kataeb Party | Lebanon | Yes | No (1936) | Yes | Falangism (former) | Moved to centre-right, Christian Democracy | |||
Kokumin Dōmei | Japan | No | No (1932) | No | Japanese fascism | Dissolved on 26 July 1940, merged into the Imperial Rule Assistance Association | |||
Kuomintang-Nanjing | China | Yes | No (1939) | No | Fascism | Established by Chinese Collaborators in China during the Second Sino-Japanese War; dissolved on 16 August 1945. | |||
Lithuanian Nationalist Union | Lithuania | Yes | No (1924) | No | Fascist corporatism, Clerical fascism | ||||
Iron Wolves[6] | Lithuania | Yes | No (1927) | No | Clerical fascism | Movement within the Clerical Party | |||
Union of Christian Socialist Workers of the Memel Region | Memel Territory (today Lithuania) | Yes | No (1927) | No | Nazism | Banned | |||
Imperium Europa | Malta | No | Yes (2000) | Yes | Neo-fascism | ||||
Concordia Association | Manchukuo | Yes | No (1931) | No | Fascism, Manchurian nationalism | |
|||
Russian Fascist Organization | Manchukuo | No | No (1925) | No | Italian Fascism, Russian nationalism | Within the Russian emigrants | |||
Russian Fascist Party | Manchukuo | No | No (1931) | No | Italian Fascism, Russian nationalism | Within the Russian emigrants | |||
Gold Shirts[6] | Mexico | No | No (1933) | No | Fascism | Banned after Mexico joined the Allies in 1942 | |||
Mexican Fascist Party | Mexico | No | No (1923) | No | Italian Fascism | ||||
Nationalist Front of Mexico | Mexico | No | Yes (2006) | Yes | Neo-fascism | ||||
Partido Nacional-Socialista de México | Mexico | No | Yes | Yes | Neo-Nazism | ||||
Tsagaan Khas | Mongolia | No | Yes (1984) | Yes | Neo-Nazism, Sinophobia, Resource nationalism |
References
edit- ^ C. T. Husbands, 'Militant Neo-Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany in the 1990s' in L. Cheles, R. Ferguson & M. Vaughan, The Far Right in Western and Eastern Europe, 1995, p. 329
- ^ C.T. Husbands, 'Militant Neo-Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany in the 1980', L. Cheles, R. Ferguson & M. Vaughan (eds.), Neo-Fascism in Europe, London: Longman, 1991, p. 99
- ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". Golden Dawn. Archived from the original on April 16, 2014. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
- ^ "10 Overlooked political ideologies". Archived from the original on November 9, 2014.
- ^ "Golden Dawn Recruiting Schoolchildren". February 27, 2013.
- ^ a b c d e Stanley G. Payne, A History of Fascism 1914–1945, London, Routledge, 2001, p. 342
- ^ Peter Davies, Derek Lynch. The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right. London, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 2002. Pp. 279.
- ^ Peter Davies, Derek Lynch. The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right. London, England, UK; New York, New York, USA: Routledge, 2002. Pp. 276.
- ^ a b S. U. Larsen, B. Hagtvet & J. P. Myklebust, Who Were the Fascists: Social Roots of European Fascism, Scandinavian University Press, Oslo, 1980. ISBN 82-00-05331-8
- ^ Haddad Adel, Gholamali; Elmi, Mohammad Jafar; Taromi-Rad, Hassan (August 31, 2012). Political Parties: Selected Entries from Encyclopaedia of the World of Islam. EWI Press. p. 11. ISBN 9781908433022.
- ^ Gholam Reza Afkhami (2008). The Life and Times of the Shah. University of California Press. pp. 434–444. ISBN 978-0-520-25328-5.
The conception of the party, a hybrid of the Italian and Spanish schools of fascism, met with widespread opposition and was withdrawn once the queen sided with its opponents. But then fascism yielded to communism. The organization became principle democratic centralism, though the term was not mentioned.
- ^ Yom, Sean (2015). From Resilience to Revolution: How Foreign Interventions Destabilize the Middle East. Columbia University Press. pp. 142–143. ISBN 9780231540278.
- ^ R. M. Douglas, Architects of the Resurrection: Ailtirí na hAiséirghe and the Fascist 'New Order' in Ireland, Manchester University Press, 2009. ISBN 0-7190-7998-5
- ^ a b Sasson Sofer. Zionism and the Foundations of Israeli Diplomacy. Cambridge University Press, 2007. Pp. 253-254.
- ^ a b Perliger and Weinberg, 2003, p. 108.
- ^ Heller, 1995, p. 86.
- ^ a b David Yisraeli, The Palestine Problem in German Politics, 1889–1945, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel, 1974.
- ^ Joseph Heller 1995, p. 86.
- ^ Robert S. Wistrich, David Ohana. The Shaping of Israeli Identity: Myth, Memory, and Trauma, Issue 3. London, England, UK; Portland, Oregon, USA: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd., 1995. Pp. 88.
- ^ "Liechtensteiner Heimatdienst". e-archiv.li (in German). Liechtenstein National Archives. Retrieved February 22, 2014.