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Five Star Movement

The Five Star Movement (Italian: Movimento 5 Stelle [moviˈmento ˈtʃiŋkwe ˈstelle], M5S) is a political party in Italy. Its leader and president is Giuseppe Conte, who served as Prime Minister of Italy from 2018 until 2021.[2] The party was founded on 4 October 2009 by Beppe Grillo, a political activist and comedian, and Gianroberto Casaleggio, a web strategist,[3] and is primarily described as populist[4][5][6] of the syncretic kind,[7][8][9] due to its members' insistence that it has no place in the left–right political spectrum.[10][11] The party is a proponent of green politics,[12] direct democracy[13][14] and, broadly, progressivism.[15][16]

Five Star Movement
Movimento 5 Stelle

M5S

4 October 2009 (2009-10-04)

Via Campo Marzio 46, Rome

Il Blog di Beppe Grillo (2009–2018)
Il Blog delle Stelle (2018–2021)

170,000[1]

EFDD (2014–2019)
Non-Inscrits (since 2019)

  Yellow

27 / 200

From 2014 to 2017, the M5S was a member of the Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group in the European Parliament, along with the UK Independence Party and minor Eurosceptic parties. In January 2017, M5S members voted in favour of Grillo's proposal to join the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group but the party was eventually refused,[17][18] and has since sat as Non-Inscrits in the European Parliament.[19]


In November 2014, Grillo appointed a "directory" composed of five leading members: Alessandro Di Battista, Luigi Di Maio, Roberto Fico, Carla Ruocco, and Carlo Sibilia.[20][21] It lasted until the following October when Grillo dissolved it and proclaimed himself the political head of the M5S.[22] From the foundation until 2021, Grillo also formally served as president of the association named "Five Star Movement"; his nephew Enrico Grillo served as vice-president and his accountant Enrico Maria Nadasi as secretary.[23][24] In the 2017 M5S leadership election, Di Maio was voted in an online primary with 82% of the vote as political head and candidate for Prime Minister, while Grillo continued to be M5S's "guarantor".[25][26] In January 2018, Grillo separated his own blog, which was used the party's online newspaper, with the brand-new Blog delle Stelle.[27] After the 2021 M5S leadership election, a new statute was approved and Conte became the new president, while Grillo continued to be the guarantor of the movement.[28] During the years, the M5S went through several splits, most recently and notably in June 2022, when Di Maio formed Together for the Future.[29]


In the 2013 general election, the M5S was the second-most popular single party and the third-most popular grouping, behind the centre-left coalition and the centre-right coalition.[30] The M5S turned down a coalition offer with the centre-left coalition and entered opposition.[31][32] In 2016, Chiara Appendino and Virginia Raggi, both members of the M5S, were elected mayors of Turin and Rome, respectively.[33] The M5S opposed the reforms proposed in the 2016 Italian constitutional referendum.[34] In the 2018 general election, the M5S became the largest party in the Italian Parliament,[35][36][37] and has since been part of government with both right-wing and left-wing coalitions.[38][39] The 2022 general election saw a strong decrease in support for the party, which scored 15% and was the third most voted party but due the electoral law was the fourth party by seats in Parliament, where they sat at the opposition.[40] Thanks in part to a strong performance in southern Italy, the M5S defied single-digits polls in July 2022,[41] and they won single-member constituencies in the South that otherwise would have been won by the centre-right coalition.[42][43] In the 2024 Sardinian regional election Alessandra Todde was elected president of Sardinia, the party's first regional president, at the head of a centre-left alliance.

History[edit]

Meetups[edit]

On 16 July 2005, Beppe Grillo suggested through his blog that supporters adopt social networks, such as Meetup, to communicate and coordinate local meetings. The first "40 Friends of Beppe Grillo" meetups began with the initial aim to "have fun, get together, share ideas and proposals for a better world, starting from one's own city, and discuss and develop my posts, if you believe them".[44] Meetups featured thematic working groups on topics entitled "technology and innovation", "press-communication", "ethical consumerism", "currency study", "no incinerators", and others.[45][46] From these beginnings, Grillo was asked to stand in the October 2005 centre-left coalition primaries for the selection of the prime ministerial candidate of The Union.[47]


On three occasions (17 December 2005 in Turin, 26 March 2006 in Piacenza, and 16 to 18 June 2006 in Sorrento), the representatives of the Friends of Beppe Grillo meetups held national meetings with Grillo, where proposals regarding environmental issues such as the replacement of polluting incinerators with systems applying mechanical-biological waste treatment were discussed.[48]


During the fourth national meeting held in Genoa on 3 February 2007, Grillo announced his desire to provide an autonomous space during his touring shows for local meetup activists.[49] On 14 July 2007, some civic list representatives who participated in local elections the previous spring met in Parma to establish a national coordination between associations, movements, and organisations. They met to practice promoting and experimenting with direct and participatory democracy, and to share a document of intent, which included the establishment of proposals, abrogative referendums, the direct election of the Ombudsman, the institution of participatory budgeting, a bound mandate for public administrators, and open primaries.[50]

(2014)

Italy Work in Progress

(2014)

X Movement

(2015)

Free Alternative

(2018)

Italy in Common

(2018)

Team K

(2020)

Italexit

(2021)

Alternative

(2022)

Environment 2050

(2022)

Together for the Future

Since its entry into Parliament, the M5S has broken up into several breakaway parties:[344][345]

(senior, 2021–present)

Paola Taverna

(2021–present)

Michele Gubitosa

(2021–present)

Riccardo Ricciardi

(2021–2023)

Alessandra Todde

(2021–present)

Mario Turco

(2023–present)

Chiara Appendino

2009–2015

2009–2015

2015–2018

2015–2018

2018–2021

2018–2021

2021–present

2021–present

Bigi Alessandro, Bonera Michelle, Bal Anjali (2015) Evaluating political party positioning over time: a proposed methodology. Journal of Public affairs, DOI: 10.1002.

De Rosa, Rosanna (2013). Voice of the People or Cybercratic Centralism? The Italian case of Beppe Grillo and Movimento Cinque Stelle. Edition Donau-Universität Krems. pp. 89–102.

Lanzone, Maria Elisabetta (2014). The "Post-Modern" Populism in Italy: The Case of the Five Star Movement. Emerald Group. pp. 53–78.

Musiani, Francesca (2014). Avant-garde: Digital Movement or "Digital Sublime" Rhetoric? The Movimento 5 Stelle and the 2013 Italian Parliamentary Elections. Springer. pp. 127–140.

Sæbø, Øystein; Braccini, Alession Maria; Federici, Tommaso (2015). From the Blogosphere into Real Politics: The Use of ICT by the Five Star Movement. Springer. pp. 241–250.

Tronconi, Filippo (2015). . Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4724-3663-4.

Beppe Grillo's Five Star Movement. Organisation, Communication and Ideology

Official website