On 8 November 1924, at the impulse of the liberal-democratic leader Giovanni Amendola, a group of anti-fascist politicians, professionals and intellectuals met to form a political association representing those principles of freedom and democracy, "the foundation of Unification of Italy and the struggles of the Risorgimento, prevaricated and persecuted by the rising fascist regime".
In the elections of 1924, the party, presented in the form of regional lists, won 8 seats (all in the southern Italy).
[2] The new political party, called the "National Union of Liberal and Democratic Forces", was joined by personalities from different political backgrounds such as the liberal-democrats Nello Rosselli and Luigi Einaudi, radicals like Giulio Alessio, social democrats like Ivanoe Bonomi, Meuccio Ruini and Luigi Salvatorelli, independents like Carlo Sforza, and, later, republicans like the young Ugo La Malfa.
[citation needed] In June 1925, the movement held its first (and only) Congress in Rome; later changed its name to "National Democratic Union".
[4] On 20 July 1925 Giovanni Amendola was attacked by a fascist squads in the locality of La Colonna in Pieve a Nievole (in the province of Pistoia) and never recovered from the aggression:[5] he died in Cannes on 7 April 1926 and the National Union itself did not outlive its leader.