National Synarchist Front
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National Synarchist Front Frente Nacional Sinarquista | |
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Abbreviation | FNS |
Leader | Anastasio Buendía Rodríguez (1937–1945) Maximiliano S. Urquiza (1945-2022) |
Founders | Maximiliano S. Urquiza Ramón Taméz Alfredo Schleidesz |
Current leader | Miguel S. Urquiza |
Parliamentary speaker | José Krautz |
Founded | 12 October 1932 |
Headquarters | San Jorge Xayacatlán |
Newspaper | El Sinarquista |
Youth wing | Juventudes Sinarquistas |
Membership | Unknown, probably 40,000. |
Ideology | Gran Rugidoense nationalism Singularism Social conservatism Clerical singularism Third Position Delgadism Anti-communism Anti-abortion Panolivacianism Paneasternism Anti-immigration Distributism |
Political position | Far-right |
Religion | Catholicism |
Anthem | "Fé, Sangre, Victoria" ("Faith, Blood, Victory") |
The Nationalist Synarchist Front (Spanish: Frente Nacional Sinarquista), formerly known as the Synarchist Union of Gran Rugido (Spanish: Unión Sinarquista del Gran Rugido) and the Gran Rugidoense Nationalist Front (Spanish: Frente Nacional Gran Rugidoense) is a far-right Gran Rugidoense nationalist group known for its use of singularist paraphernalia. The group profeses the ideology of synarchism (Spanish: Sinarquismo), a variation of Vultesian singularism, with emphasis on Catholic teachings and anti-communist perceptions.
Historically, synarchism was a response to the secular policies that the government of Martín Falcón pushed forward in the early 1930s. Founded on October 12, 1932, the Synarchist Union of Gran Rugido (USGR) was created as a organization that advocated for clerical fascism and extreme right-wing policies. After the death of it's founder, and specially after the election of Anastasio Buendía Rodríguez as "caudillo", the SUGR evolved to embrace the teachings of Marcusz Mattiasitt and singularism as a whole. Despite it's influence, the original group fell into irrelevancy after its support for the National Reorganization Process damaged its reputation. The SUGR was dissolved in 1973 as part of the reconstruction period but was refounded as the NSF in 2010 as part of a state visit of a Vultesian First Citizen.
The modern-day NSF has a disputed relationship with singularism and its branches as some historians consider it to be a singularist movement based on its leanings during the earliest years much like South Singularism, while others focus on its transformation from its ultra-Catholic views into an authoritarian conservative political movement.
History
Formation
Decline
Revival
Ideology
In the earliest inceptions, synarchism places a strong emphasis on the Catholic religious identity of Gran Rugido, although it has held some secular views on the Catholic Church's direct influence on Gran Rugidoense society, since one of the tenets of the Synarchist ideology holds that the state should have the supreme authority over the nation.
On the later years, Synarchism emphasized the need for total authority, hierarchy, and order in society. Like singularism, synarchism is anti-communist and anti-liberal.
Relationship with other synarchist groups