1895 Italian general election explained

Country:Kingdom of Italy
Type:legislative
Previous Election:1892 Italian general election
Previous Year:1892
Next Election:1897 Italian general election
Next Year:1897
Seats For Election:All 508 seats in the Chamber of Deputies255 seats needed for a majority
Election Date:26 May 1895 (first round)
2 June 1895 (second round)
Image1:Francesco Crispi.jpg
Leader1:Francesco Crispi
Party1:Historical Left
Seats1:334
Seat Change1:11
Popular Vote1:713,812
Percentage1:58.57%
Leader2:Antonio Starabba di Rudinì
Party2:Historical Right
Seats2:104
Seat Change2:11
Popular Vote2:263,315
Percentage2:21.61%
Image3:Felice Cavallotti.jpg
Leader3:Felice Cavallotti
Party3:Historical Far Left
Seats3:47
Seat Change3:20
Popular Vote3:142,356
Percentage3:11.68%
Prime Minister
Posttitle:Elected Prime Minister
Before Election:Giovanni Giolitti
After Election:Francesco Crispi
Before Party:Historical Left
After Party:Historical Left

General elections were held in Italy on 26 May 1895, with a second round of voting on 2 June.[1] The "ministerial" left-wing bloc remained the largest in Parliament, winning 334 of the 508 seats.[2]

Background

In December 1893 the impotence of the Giovanni Giolitti cabinet to restore public order, menaced by disturbances in Sicily and the Banca Romana scandal, gave rise to a general demand that Francesco Crispi should return to power. Although Giolitti tried to put a halt to the manifestations and protests of the Fasci Siciliani, his measures were relatively mild. In the three weeks of uncertainty before Crispi formed a government on 15 December 1893, the rapid spread of violence drove many local authorities to defy Giolitti’s ban on the use of firearms. In December 1893 92 peasants lost their lives in clashes with the police and army. Government building were burned as well as flour mills and bakeries that refused to lower their prices when taxes were lowered or abolished.[3] [4]

On 3 January 1894 Crispi declared a state of siege throughout Sicily. Army reservists were recalled and General Roberto Morra di Lavriano was dispatched with 40,000 troops.[5] [6] The old order was restored through the use of extreme force, including summary executions. A solidarity revolt of anarchists and republicans in the Lunigiana was crushed as well.

The repression of the Fasci turned into outright persecution. The government arrested not just the leaders of the movement, but masses of poor farmers, students, professionals, sympathizers of the Fasci, and even those simply suspected of having sympathized with the movement at some point in time, in many cases without any evidence for the accusations. After the declaration of the state of emergency, condemnations were issued for the paltriest of reasons. Many rioters were incarcerated for having shouted things such as "Viva l'anarchia" or "down with the King". At Palermo, in April and May 1894, the trials against the central committee of the Fasci took place and this was the final blow that signaled the death knell of the movement of the Fasci Siciliani.[7]

On 16 June 1894 the anarchist Paolo Lega tried to shoot Crispi but the attempt failed.[8] On 24 June an Italian anarchist killed French President Carnot. In this climate of increased the fear of anarchism, Crispi was able to introduce a series of anti-anarchist laws in July 1894, which were also used against socialists. Heavy penalties were announced for "incitement to class hatred" and police received extended powers of preventive arrest and deportation.[9]

Crispi steadily supported the energetic remedies adopted by his Minister of Finance Sidney Sonnino to save Italian credit, which had been severely shaken the financial crisis of 1892–1893 and the Banca Romana scandal. In 1894 he was threatened with expulsion from the Masonic Grande Oriente d'Italia for being too friendly towards the Catholic Church.[10] He had previously been strongly anticlerical but had become convinced of the need for rapprochement with the Papacy.[11]

Crispi's uncompromising suppression of disorder, and his refusal to abandon either the Triple Alliance or the Eritrean colony, or to forsake his Minister of the Treasury, Sidney Sonnino, caused a breach with the radical leader Felice Cavallotti. Cavallotti began a pitiless campaign of defamation against him. The unsuccessful attempt upon Crispi’s life by the anarchist Lega brought a momentary truce, but Cavallotti’s attacks were soon renewed more fiercely than ever. They produced little effect and the general election of 1895 gave Crispi a huge majority. Nevertheless, the humiliating defeat of the Italian army at Adwa in March 1896 in Ethiopia during First Italo-Ethiopian War, brought about his resignation after riots broke out in several Italian towns.[12] [13]

Parties and leaders

PartyIdeologyLeader
Historical LeftLiberalismFrancesco Crispi
Historical RightConservatismAntonio Starabba di Rudinì
Historical Far LeftRadicalismFelice Cavallotti
Italian Socialist PartySocialismAndrea Costa

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p1082
  3. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1893/12/27/109716817.pdf Shot Down by the Soldiers; Four of the Mob Killed in an Anti-Tax Riot in Sicily
  4. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/01/03/106092087.pdf Sicily Under Mob Control; A Series of Antitax Riots in The Island
  5. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/01/04/106092311.pdf The Italian Government Alarmed; More Troops Called Out for Service in Sicily
  6. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/01/05/106092650.pdf Martial Law Proclaimed In Sicily; Stern Measures Resorted To to Quiet the Anti-Tax Troubles
  7. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/05/31/106867139.pdf Sicilian Rioters Sentenced
  8. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/06/17/106908504.pdf Premier Crispi's Escape; Two Shots Fired At Him In The Streets Of Rome
  9. Seton-Watson, Italy from liberalism to fascism, pp. 165-67
  10. https://www.nytimes.com/1894/10/10/archives/crispi-to-be-expelled-by-freemasons.html Crispi to be Expelled by Freemasons
  11. "Crispi, a Freemason of deist convictions who had opposed the Law of Guarantees, had warned Bismarck and Léon Gambetta of the international danger of the Papacy in 1876, and had sacked Torlonia as late as 1887, gradually emerged as the leader of the effort to form an alliance with Catholics in defense of the established order." Secular Italy and Catholicism: 1848 - 1915, by John Rao, in Models and Images of Catholicism in Italian and Italian American Life Forum Italicum of the Center for Italian Studies at S.U.N.Y. Stony Brook, 2004, pp. 195-230 2004
  12. Vandervort, Wars of Imperial Conquest in Africa, 1830–1914, pp. 162-64
  13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1896/07/05/106918840.pdf Italy’s African Fiasco