Potere Operaio

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Potere Operaio (Workers' Power) was a radical left-wing Italian political group, active between 1968 and 1973. (It shouldn't be confused with "Potere Operaio Pisano" which was one of the components of a competing "revolutionary" group, Lotta Continua.) Among the group's leaders were Antonio ('Toni') Negri, Franco Piperno, Oreste Scalzone and Valerio Morucci, who led its clandestine armed wing.[citation needed] It was part of the "workerist" movement (operaismo), leading to the later development of the Autonomist movement.

Potere Operaio's main sphere of operations was in factories, especially big factories in the industrial North, and publishing newspapers and leaflets. It sought to base its Marxist theory on the everyday life of supposedly revolutionary factory workers.

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Criminal operations

Despite presenting a legal facade and acting as a harbour for intellectuals and other individuals connected to protests in factories, Potere Operaio had been involved in some criminal operations, like the Primavalle Fire of Abril 16 1973 (an attack on the house of a neo-fascist MSI militant, which resulted in his two sons (20 and 8 years old) burning alive), or the kidnapping and accidental killing of Carlo Saronio, a Potere Operaio sympathizer and son of a prominent industrialist family. It had a very scant support among industrial workers, essentially among recently-immigrated, young, frustrated industrial workers in the chemical sector.[1][citation needed]

Members of the group theorized the use of violence to impose the "revolutionary struggle".[citation needed] Potere Operaio's leaders quickly lost their grip on the organization, which disbanded after a number of investigations by the Italian authorities after 1973.

End and shift from operaismo to autonomism

Potere Operaio officially ceased to exist on 3 June 1973. Most of its core members went on to be involved in Autonomia Operaia, signalling the shift from operaismo to autonomism. Some of the leaders later drifted towards more radical groups such as the Red Brigades, including Morucci and Adriana Faranda, who took part in the Moro murder. Negri was arrested in the late 1970s, accused of being the leader of the Red Brigades, before being cleared of charges. Oreste Scalzone also was arrested, in connection with violent acts.

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