Produced by the Fronte della Gioventù (Youth Front, FdG), this poster's message is that "L'Europa riparte dai giovani" (Europe Is Renewed by the Youth). Typifying the Italian far right's reverence for classical Rome, the poster's background imagery features a silhouette of a Roman centurion. As is the case with Mikis Mantakas' poster, this FdG poster frames the far-right agenda as not just a national but, also, a global struggle. Here, though, there are clear imperialist overtones with the visual evocation of the ancient Roman Empire.
Founded in 2015, but based on a dissolved neo-fascist youth organization formerly coordinated by the Movimento Sociale Italiano (Italian Social Movement, MSI), FdG's objective is to "bring youth back on top." The youth group's contemporary leadership has described the condition of the global economy as an "explosive mixture that will affect the most vulnerable social class: young people," due to "falling oil prices, latent recession, slowdown in the U.S. economic cycle, sluggish domestic demand in emerging countries, [and] plunging stock markets." In the face of the lethargy of "a political class devoid of values," FdG calls for its members to take action against "this social war that not only affects Italy but also the rest of Europe." Echoing the language of interwar Italian Fascism, which presented itself as neither left nor right but, instead, a "Third Way" approach to industrial modernity, the organization concludes its manifesto with the following call-to-arms:
Let us take up our flag again and continue in this direction, towards the third way, a direction born from the union of alternative forces to the system, with a strong pro-European stance, not the Europe of bureaucrats and technocrats, of course, but a Europe of the fatherlands, who will never stop fighting for the good of their people! (2016).
There appears to be a loose connection between Magnitudo Italia (Magnitude Italy, MI) – a far-right political activism organization based in Rome – and the various FdG posters which appeared throughout Italy's capital city between October 2018 and May of the following year. In November 2018, MI held a demonstration against the mayor of Rome, Virginia Raggi, in Piazza del Popolo, which included a banner with an strikingly similar phrasing: "L'Italia riparte dai giovani" (Italy Is Renewed by Its Youth) (Fig. 4). Since FdG was dissolved in the mid-1990s along with its parent organization, the MSI, it remains a mystery as to which individual or organization – or, perhaps, which constellation of individuals and organizations – was responsible for the dissemination of these FdG-branded materials. The usage of these similar phrases, however, combined with the concentration of these posters and banners in Rome's northern neighborhoods, where MI is headquartered, strongly suggests a connection between the latter and the FdG posters.
At the time of this writing, FdG has not posted on any social media channels since 2018. The group's Instagram and Facebook pages, both of which are advertised on this poster, are no longer available.