European Social Movement

The European Social Movement (ESM) was a neo-fascist Europe-wide alliance set up in 1951 to promote Pan-European nationalism. The ESM had its origins in the emergence of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), which established contacts with like-minded smaller groups in Europe during the late 1940s, setting up European Study Center and publishing a magazine Europa Unita. On the back of this work they organised a conference in Rome in 1950 which was attended by Oswald Mosley, whose Union Movement was advocating closer European unity with its Europe a Nation policy, representatives of the Falange, allies of Gaston-Armand Amaudruz and other leading figures from the far right. After submitting plans for a centrally organised Europe a second congress followed in 1951 at Malmö, the home of Per Engda

European Social Movement

The European Social Movement (ESM) was a neo-fascist Europe-wide alliance set up in 1951 to promote Pan-European nationalism. The ESM had its origins in the emergence of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), which established contacts with like-minded smaller groups in Europe during the late 1940s, setting up European Study Center and publishing a magazine Europa Unita. On the back of this work they organised a conference in Rome in 1950 which was attended by Oswald Mosley, whose Union Movement was advocating closer European unity with its Europe a Nation policy, representatives of the Falange, allies of Gaston-Armand Amaudruz and other leading figures from the far right. After submitting plans for a centrally organised Europe a second congress followed in 1951 at Malmö, the home of Per Engda