National Fascist Union Unión Nacional Fascista | |
---|---|
Historic Leader | Nimio de Anquín |
Founded | 1936 (1936) |
Dissolved | 1939 (1939) [1] |
Preceded by | Argentine Fascist Party |
Ideology |
Fascism Clerical fascism Nacionalismo Anti-communism Falangism |
Political position | Far-right |
Party flag | |
The National Fascist Union (Unión Nacional Fascista, UNF) was a fascist political party formed in Argentina in 1936, as the successor to the Argentine Fascist Party. [2]
In August 1936, UNF leader Nimio de Anquín attempted to force students at a law school in Cordoba to pledge a statement of support for the Spanish general Francisco Franco. [3] Police responded with a crackdown against Argentine nationalists. [3] Support for the UNF surged after two nationalists were shot in the Colegio Montserrat in 1938. [3] In the aftermath of the Montserrat murders, Anquin denounced the middle and upper class for complicity and cowardice and claimed that " communism, Judaism, and degenerate Radicalism" were responsible for causing the murders. [4] Anquín called for the mourners to swear "by God, honour, and the Fatherland, to return the homicidal bullet". [4]
By 1939, the UNF was largely defunct, and Anquín returned to his hometown to resume his earlier career as a lecturer. [1]
This article about an Argentine political party is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
National Fascist Union Unión Nacional Fascista | |
---|---|
Historic Leader | Nimio de Anquín |
Founded | 1936 (1936) |
Dissolved | 1939 (1939) [1] |
Preceded by | Argentine Fascist Party |
Ideology |
Fascism Clerical fascism Nacionalismo Anti-communism Falangism |
Political position | Far-right |
Party flag | |
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The National Fascist Union (Unión Nacional Fascista, UNF) was a fascist political party formed in Argentina in 1936, as the successor to the Argentine Fascist Party. [2]
In August 1936, UNF leader Nimio de Anquín attempted to force students at a law school in Cordoba to pledge a statement of support for the Spanish general Francisco Franco. [3] Police responded with a crackdown against Argentine nationalists. [3] Support for the UNF surged after two nationalists were shot in the Colegio Montserrat in 1938. [3] In the aftermath of the Montserrat murders, Anquin denounced the middle and upper class for complicity and cowardice and claimed that " communism, Judaism, and degenerate Radicalism" were responsible for causing the murders. [4] Anquín called for the mourners to swear "by God, honour, and the Fatherland, to return the homicidal bullet". [4]
By 1939, the UNF was largely defunct, and Anquín returned to his hometown to resume his earlier career as a lecturer. [1]
This article about an Argentine political party is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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