{{Ideology
|themecolor = #202020
|textcolor = #FF0000
|title = National Syndicalism
|image = CercleProudhon.png
|caption = “The sense of our idea is this: Destroying the principle that founded the modern economy, that imposed on nations the capitalist regime and subordinated all human values to the value of gold; to found a new economy which will be a national economy and which will judge all the institutions which grow from the economy in keeping with the guarantees they assure French blood.”
|aliases = Cercle Proudhon
Spanish Proto-Fascism
Fascist Syndicalism
Religious Syndicalism
Right-Syndicalism
Gamer Syndicalism
Fascist Mutualism
Jonsism (In Spain)
Totalism (By HOI4 KR community)
|alignments = AuthLeft
Culturally Right
Religious (Usually)
Syndicalists
Socialists
Third Positionists
Nationalists
Quasi-Fascists
(Accused)
|variants =
|regional=
Cuban Revolutionary Party – Authentic
Portuguese National Syndicalism
Robert E. Ley/Nazi Syndicalism
- Anti-Capitalism
- Anti-Americanism
- Anti-Marxism
- Anti-Masonry
- Anti-Semitism
- Fascism
- Nazism
- European Nationalism
- Positive Christianity
- Corporatism
- Strasserism (Early on)
|influences = Anti-Capitalism
Anti-Democracy
Anti-Liberalism
Corporatism
Integral Nationalism
Mutualism
Revolutionary Syndicalism
Sorelianism
|influenced =
British Fascism
Falangism
Fascism
Integral Nationalism
Monarcho-Syndicalism
Tarrantism
- Charles Maurras (1868-1952), France
- Alceste De Ambris (1874-1934) Kingdom of Italy
- Édouard Berth (1875-1939), France
- Georges Valois (1878-1945), France
- Robert E. Ley (1890-1945) Germany
- Francisco Rolão Preto (1893-1977), Portugal
- Jacques Arthuys (1894-1943), France
- José Antonio Primo de Rivera (1903-1936), Second Spanish Republic
- Ramiro Ledesma Ramos (1905-1936), Second Spanish Republic
- Onésimo Redondo (1905-1936), Second Spanish Republic
- Pedro Durruti (1911-1937), Second Spanish Republic
- Vyacheslav Klykov (1939-2006) Russia
- Ramón Grau (1881-1969), Cuba
- Nimio de Anquín (1896-1979) Argentina
- Osvaldo Lira (1904-1996), Chile
- Julio Meinvielle (1905-1973), Argentina
- Jorge Luna Yépes (1909-1989), Ecuador
- Salvador Abascal (1910-2000), Mexico
- Óscar Únzaga (1916-1959)
- Misael Galleguillos (1940-), Chile
Fictional Theorists In KR {{Collapse|
- Georges Sorel (1847-1922), France
- William Z. Foster (1881), Combined Syndicates of America
- Benito Mussolini (1883), Italian Socialist Republic
- Earl Russell Browder (1891), United Socialist Federation of America
- Oswald Mosley (1896), Union of Britain
- Dai Li (1897), Republic of China
]] ]]
National Syndicalism is an economically left, nationalist, authoritarian and culturally right ideology. It emerged from the tendency of revolutionary syndicalists to ally with integral nationalists. It opposes Capitalism, liberal democracy and Secularism. The ideology is usually associated with either Integralism or Fascism.
History
Portuguese National Syndicalism
National Syndicalism in Portugal was characterized by the condemnation of the totalitarianism present in German and Italian societies during the 1930s, its leader, Francisco Rolão Preto, declared during a banquet that the National Syndicalist Movement was "beyond democracy, fascism and communism". The National Syndicalist Movement had a strong Catholic inspiration, with the Order of Christ Cross being their symbol, they were very popular among university students and young soldiers. It endorsed Catholic social teaching, Christian personalism, integralism, municipalism and a restoration of the traditional monarchy and were opposed to communism and capitalism. Its members were also known as the Blueshirts, as they used blue shirts as uniforms.
Its leader, Francisco Rolão Preto declared on an interview to the United Press that: " fascism and hitlerism are totalitarian, divinizers of the State and caesarists: we pretend to find in the Christian tradition of the Portuguese people the formula that allows the harmonization of the sovereignty of the national interest with the moral dignity of free men."
He criticized the Estado Novo for adopting a single-party system typical of fascism, which he hated, due to this criticism, the national syndicalist journal 'Revolução!' was suspended on 24 July. On November of the same year, the national syndicalists split, the majority decided to support Salazar and integrate the party with the União Nacional, abandoning the principles of partisan independence defended by Rolão Preto and Alberto Monsaraz.
On 10 July 1934, Rolão Preto was arrested and subsequently exiled and on 29 July of the same year, national syndicalism was forbidden by the salazarists.
Spanish National Syndicalism
See Falangism
Italian National Syndicalism
In the early 20th century, nationalists and syndicalists were increasingly influencing each other in Italy. From 1902 to 1910, a number of Italian revolutionary syndicalists including Arturo Labriola, Agostino Lanzillo, Angelo Oliviero Olivetti, Alceste De Ambris, Filippo Corridoni and Sergio Panunzio sought to unify the Italian nationalist cause with the syndicalist cause and had entered into contact with Italian nationalist figures such as Enrico Corradini. These Italian national syndicalists held a common set of principles: the rejection of bourgeois values, democracy, liberalism, marxism, internationalism, and pacifism while promoting heroism, vitalism, and violence. Not all Italian revolutionary syndicalists joined the fascist cause, but most syndicalist leaders eventually embraced nationalism and "were among the founders of the fascist movement," where "many even held key posts" in Mussolini's regime. Benito Mussolini declared in 1909 that he had converted over to revolutionary syndicalism by 1904 during a general strike.
Enrico Corradini promoted a form of national syndicalism that utilized maurassian nationalism alongside the syndicalism of Georges Sorel. Corradini spoke of the need for a national syndicalist movement that would be able to solve Italy's problems, led by elitist aristocrats and anti-democrats who shared a revolutionary syndicalist commitment to direct action through a willingness to fight. Corradini spoke of Italy as being a "proletarian nation" that needed to pursue imperialism in order to challenge the "plutocratic" nations of France and the United Kingdom. Corradini's views were part of a wider set of perceptions within the right-wing Italian Nationalist Association (ANI) that claimed that Italy's economic backwardness was caused by corruption within its political class, liberalism, and division caused by "ignoble socialism". The ANI held ties and influence amongst conservatives, Catholics, and the business community.
A number of Italian fascist leaders began to relabel national syndicalism as Fascist syndicalism. Mussolini was one of the first to disseminate this term, explaining that " Fascist syndicalism is national and productivistic… in a national society in which labor becomes a joy, an object of pride and a title to nobility." By the time Edmondo Rossoni became secretary-general of the General Confederation of Fascist Syndical Corporations in December 1922, other Italian national syndicalists were adopting the " Fascist syndicalism" phrase in their aim at "building and reorganizing political structures… through a synthesis of State and labor". An early leader in Italian trade unionism, Rossoni and other fascist syndicalists not only took the position of radical nationalism, but favored "class struggle". Seen at the time as "radical or leftist elements," Rossoni and his syndicalist cadre had "served to some extent to protect the immediate economic interests of the workers and to preserve their class consciousness". Rossoni was dismissed from his post in 1928, which could have been due to his powerful leadership position in the Fascist unions, and his hostilities to the business community, occasionally referring to industrialists as "vampires" and "profiteers".
With the outbreak of World War I, Sergio Panunzio noted the national solidarity within France and Germany that suddenly arose in response to the war and claimed that should Italy enter the war, the Italian nation would become united and would emerge from the war as a new nation in a "Fascio nazionale" (national union) that would be led by an aristocracy of warrior-producers that would unite Italians of all classes, factions, and regions into a disciplined socialism.
In November 1918, Mussolini defined national syndicalism as a doctrine that would unite economic classes into a program of national development and growth.
Beliefs
WIP
How to Draw
Cercle Proudhon Eagle design
- Draw a ball.
- Fill the ball with black.
- Draw the Cercle Proudhon eagle in red.
- Draw the eyes and you're done!
Color Name | HEX | RGB | |
---|---|---|---|
Black | #141414 | 20, 20, 20 | |
Red | #FF0000 | 255, 0, 0 |
Portuguese design
- Draw a ball
- Color it blue
- In the center, draw a white circle
- In the circle, draw a red outline of a cross
- Add the eyes and you're done
Color Name | HEX | RGB | |
---|---|---|---|
Blue | #00309A | 0, 48, 154 | |
White | #FFFFFF | 255, 255, 255 | |
Red | #D72821 | 215, 40, 33 |
JONS design
- Draw a ball
- Fill it black
- Draw 8 red spokes
- Draw a black circle in the middle
- Draw a white claw
- Add the eyes
Color Name | HEX | RGB | |
---|---|---|---|
Black | #141414 | 20, 20, 20 | |
Red | #DB0A13 | 219, 10, 19 | |
White | #FFFFFF | 255, 255, 255 |
Relations
Friends
- National Anarchism - Love ya bud, but please get a state.
- Mutualism - I owe most of my inspiration to you!
Wait, why are you looking at me weird? - Falangism - My Spanish son.
- British Fascism - My British incarnation.
- Yellow Socialism - Syndicalist and Nationalist? Based!
- Monarcho-Syndicalism - Tradition and Syndicalism? Mega Based!
- Integral Nationalism - My good old friend.
Frenemies
- Sorelianism - What do you mean you aren’t a nationalist and you oppose reactionaries? But you were a huge influence on most of us, especially Cercle Proudhon.
- Welfare Chauvinism - Good direction by far, you are slowly getting there. But you have to reject completely the Free Market. At least SD had already embraced the 3rd position and works with trade unions.
- Francoism - You abandoned national syndicalism for him!?
- Anarcho-Syndicalism - Degenerate anarchist progressive, but somewhat based economics. I wish the economics were a bit less left wing, though.
- French Fascism - I thought he would follow my ideology but he betrayed France.
- Marxism–Leninism - You have some good ideas but I am not Nazi.
- National Conservatism - Ayy, you get me pretty much! But be more economically left.
- National Bolshevism - Too much left-wing economically, syndicates should still have an important role in the national economy, but still overall decent.
Can I join the GANG? - Strasserism - A bit too Racialist socially, plus you're associated with Nazis, but you are still better than them.
- Marxism - I like the idea of class struggle but why so materialistic? Also a h*gelian.
- Socialism - You taught me how to strike and I respect you for that, but please embrace nationalism.
- Fascism - You did a good job spreading my ideas but why the Hegelianism and Totalitarianism?
- Nazism- Same as above, and you put racialism over syndicalist ideals. But you and Mussolini were a good help for the Spanish National Syndicalists.
Enemies
- Capitalism - Dehumanizing system!
- Neoliberalism - Your economic and social policies are revolting.
- Neoconservatism - Fake conservative, he leaves economic disasters wherever he goes.
- Progressivism - A tool to legitimize the rule of the bourgeoisie.
- Left Communism - Revisionism is fine cry about it.
- National Capitalism - You're not a nationalist. You are just a racialist capitalist.
Further Information
Literature
Wikipedia
- National Syndicalism
- Cercle Proudhon
- National Syndicalists (Portugal)
- JONS (Spain)
- Fascist syndicalism
- Revolutionary National Syndicalist Movement
Gallery
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Credit: TheLegend2T, Source
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Credit: Based And Jedpilled
-
Old Drawing for the Portuguese NatSynd ball
Nationalists - For The Motherland! | |
Moderate | Main Nativism • Patriotism Related Protectionism • Isolationism Self-Inserts |
---|---|
Main | Main Nationalism • Separatism • Pan-Nationalism Definitions Volkish Nationalism • Ethnic Nationalism • Cultural Nationalism • Linguistic Nationalism • Religious Nationalism • Racial Nationalism • Civic Nationalism • Species Nationalism Application Universal Nationalism • Fictional Nationalism • Left-Wing Nationalism • Eco-Nationalism Related Ethnopluralism • Racism • Directed Socialism • Indigenism • Tinism Other Ideologies National Agrarianism • National Capitalism • National Communism • National Conservatism • National Liberalism • National Libertarianism • Welfare Chauvinism Self-Inserts |
Chauvinists | Ultranationalism • Jingoism
Self-Inserts |
Religious - Gott mit uns! | |
Main | Christian Democracy • Islamic Democracy • Religious Nationalism • Religious Rejectionism • Religious Anarchism |
---|---|
Theocratic | Christian Theocracy • Islamic Theocracy • Jewish Theocracy • Buddhist Theocracy • • Hindu Theocracy • Pagan Theocracy • Sikh Theocracy • Zoroastrian Theocracy • Shinto Theocracy • Chinese Theocracy |
Fictional | |
Self-Insert | Evenoskyism • BetterCallSneedism |