Jump to content

Open Aosta Valley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Open Aosta Valley
Valle d'Aosta Aperta
AbbreviationVdA Aperta
LeaderErika Guichardaz
Founded2022
Split fromProgressive Civic Project
IdeologyEco-socialism
Progressivism[1]
Regionalism
Political positionLeft-wing[2]
Regional Council of Aosta Valley
1 / 35
Website
https://www.vdaaperta.it/

Open Aosta Valley (Italian: Valle d'Aosta Aperta) is a left-wing regionalist coalition of political parties active in Aosta Valley, Italy.

History

[edit]

In the 2022 general election, Five Star Movement, Democratic Area–Autonomist Left (AD–GA), Environment Rights Equality (ADU) and Italian Left (SI) formed Open VdA and nominated Erika Guichardaz (AD-GA) for the Chamber and Daria Pulz (ADU) for the Senate.[3][4] ADU and SI already united by a federative pact.[5] Guichardaz and Pulz obtained 10.9% and 10.0% of the vote, respectively.

In December 2024, Open VdA announced its intention to run on a joint list for the 2025 regional election.[6] In February 2025, Guichardaz stated that Progressive Civic Project "ceased to exist" and excluded running on a list which goes from Civic Network, via Power to the People to Legambiente.[7] On 22 April 2025, Civic Network announced that will run with Italian Left as Greens and Left Alliance.[8] Socialist Risorgimento and Communist Refoundation Party joined Open VdA the same day.[9]

Member parties

[edit]
Party Ideology
Democratic Area–Autonomist Left (AD–GA) Social democracy
Five Star Movement (M5S) Populism
Environment Rights Equality (ADU) Eco-socialism
United on the Left (PRCRS) Communism
former
Party Ideology
Italian Left (SI) Democratic socialism

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Valle d'Aosta Aperta: le proposte di Guichardaz e Pulz per un Paese più giusto". aostasera.it (in Italian). 14 September 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2025.
  2. ^ "Aosta: sindacati, associazioni e forze politiche di sinistra in piazza per ribadire il NO alle guerre". aostanews24 (in Italian). 26 February 2024. Retrieved 28 April 2024.
  3. ^ https://www.ansa.it/valledaosta/notizie/2022/08/09/elezioni-guichardaz-e-pulz-due-donne-per-sinistra-e-m5s-vda_eb29ff31-9fe4-4bbe-bc58-2af65b63cc12.html
  4. ^ https://www.dire.it/09-08-2022/773752-in-valle-daosta-guichardaz-e-pulz-candidate-per-adu-m5s-e-area-dem
  5. ^ https://www.ansa.it/valledaosta/notizie/2022/04/14/accordo-adu-sinistra-italiana-per-una-valle-daosta-aperta_772aafac-8d82-4244-9e50-cfc9c6a84e45.html
  6. ^ "VdA Aperta: annuncia la lista per regionali del 2025 e boccia il bilancio". Gazzetta Matin (in Italian). 5 December 2024. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  7. ^ "«Progetto Civico Progressista non esiste più». Regione e Comune, è polemica aperta a sinistra". La Vallée Notizie (in Italian). 19 February 2025. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  8. ^ "Regionali, annunciata la lista Avs-Rete civica" (in Italian). ANSA. 22 April 2025. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
  9. ^ "Valle d'Aosta Aperta si allarga: entrano Rifondazione Comunista e Risorgimento Socialista". aostasera.it (in Italian). 22 April 2025. Retrieved 22 April 2025.
[edit]