New Triumph Party

Partido del Nuevo Triunfo (New Triumph Party) was a minor far right Neo-Nazi group in Argentina banned on 17 March 2009 by ruling of the Argentine Supreme Court of Justice.[1]

Origins

The party was formed by Alejandro Biondini in 1990 as the Partido Nacionalista de los Trabajadores (Nationalist Worker's Party), initially as a breakaway from the Justicialist Party.[2] The party leader anticipated economic crisis in the country which he felt would set up the basis for a takeover by revolutionary nationalism.[3] Biondini is a veteran of the international neo-nazi scene, having established a group called Alerta Nacional in 1984, which he described as 'a small part of the great worldwide socialist movement'. This group has attempted to build links between the country's various extreme right groups.[4]

Development

The party was re-launched as the New Triumph Party in November 1997, identifying itself as 'the political, militant and electoral expression of Argentine national socialism'.[5] At a time when use of the internet by fringe political groups was limited but growing in popularity the New Triumph Party's online publication Libertad de Opinión broke new ground in Argentina by providing a regular forum for Argentine neo-Nazism and anti-Semitism.[5] Ricardo Brinzoni was briefly associated with the group as his lawyer Juan Enrique Torres Bande was a member.[6]

The party has consistently attempted to gain legal recognition but has been rejected.[2] Nonetheless in the Argentine legislative election, 2005 two members of the party, Biondini's wife and son, featured as candidates for Acción Ciudadana, a group headed by Jorge Colotto, the general commissioner of the Policía Federal Argentina.[7]

Ideology

The party supports Neo-Nazism and seeks to use Argentina as the new Nazi base. It has been claimed that Biondini believes that Adolf Hitler had identified Argentina as the future of Nazism. He has claimed that in the final days in the Führerbunker Hitler pointed to Argentina on a map and stated that 'from there the new leader will come'.[2]

The party has also been vocal in its criticism of the major political parties and leaders, denouncing Fernando de la Rúa as a puppet of the Zionist Occupation Government.[2] As part of this rhetoric it also emphasises its grounding in Christianity.[8]

Platform

The ideas of the party have been summed up by them in declaration of policies which states five aims for the Argentine people. These are listed as:

References

External links

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