Vallée d'Aoste Vive explained

Vallée d'Aoste Vive
Leader1 Title:Leader
Leader1 Name:Roberto Louvin
Leader2 Title:Secretary
Leader2 Name:Guido Dondeynaz
Split:Valdostan Union
Foundation:4 December 2005
Dissolution:12 February 2010
Headquarters:via De Tillier, 12
11100 Aosta
Ideology:Regionalism[1]
Social liberalism
Social democracy
Merged:Autonomy Liberty Participation Ecology
Colorcode:orange
Country:Aosta Valley

Vallée d'Aoste Vive (translatable as Aosta Valley Alive, VdAV) was a social-liberal[1] Italian political party active in the Aosta Valley. It was founded on 4 December 2005 by a left-wing split from the Valdostan Union and its leader was Roberto Louvin.

For the 2006 general election, the Lively Aosta Valley took part to the Autonomy Liberty Democracy (ALD) coalition, alongside the Democrats of the Left, The Daisy, Valdostan Renewal, the Communist Refoundation Party, the Federation of the Greens and other minor parties.

In the 2008 regional election the party formed a joint list with Valdostan Renewal: the list won 12.5% of the vote and 5 regional deputies (out of 35), of which 2 of VdAV. ALD was however severely defeated by the Aosta Valley coalition.[2]

In February 2010 VdAV agreed to merge into a new party named Autonomy Liberty Participation Ecology (ALPE), along with Valdostan Renewal, Alternative Greens and other centre-left groups.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aosta Valley/Italy. https://web.archive.org/web/20120618022841/http://parties-and-elections.eu:80/aosta.html. 2008. 18 June 2012. Nordsieck. Wolfram. Parties and Elections in Europe. dead.
  2. Web site: Regione Valle d'Aosta . Elezioni.regione.vda.it . 2014-07-16.
  3. Web site: Nasce ALPE: ad aprile le primarie sceglieranno sindaco e vice da candidare . it . AostaSera.it . 2014-07-16.