1913 Italian general election explained

Country:Kingdom of Italy
Type:legislative
Previous Election:1909 Italian general election
Previous Year:1909
Next Election:1919 Italian general election
Next Year:1919
Seats For Election:All 508 seats in the Chamber of Deputies255 seats needed for a majority
Election Date:26 October 1913 (first round)
2 November 1913 (second round)
Image1:Giovanni Giolitti.jpg
Leader1:Giovanni Giolitti
Party1:Liberal Union (Italy)
Seats1:270
Seat Change1:59
Popular Vote1:2,387,947
Percentage1:47.62%
Swing1:6.83pp
Party2:Italian Socialist Party
Seats2:52
Seat Change2:11
Popular Vote2:883,409
Percentage2:17.62%
Swing2:1.40pp
Image3:Ettore Sacchi.jpeg
Leader3:Ettore Sacchi
Party3:Italian Radical Party
Seats3:62
Seat Change3:14
Popular Vote3:522,522
Percentage3:10.42%
Swing3:0.50pp
Prime Minister
Posttitle:Elected Prime Minister
Before Election:Giovanni Giolitti
After Election:Giovanni Giolitti
Before Party:Liberal Union (Italy)
After Party:Liberal Union (Italy)

General elections were held in Italy on 26 October 1913, with a second round of voting on 2 November.[1] The Liberals (the former Ministeriali) narrowly retained an absolute majority in the Chamber of Deputies, while the Radical Party emerged as the largest opposition bloc. Both groupings did particularly well in Southern Italy, while the Italian Socialist Party gained eight seats and was the largest party in Emilia-Romagna.[2] However, the election marked the beginning of the decline of Liberal establishment.

There were episodes of violence during the election.[3]

Background

The two historical parliamentary factions, the liberal and progressive Left and the conservative and monarchist Right, formed a single liberal and centrist group, known as Liberal Union, under the leadership of Giovanni Giolitti. This phenomenon, known in Italian as Trasformismo (roughly translatable in English as "transformism"—in a satirical newspaper, the PM was depicted as a chameleon), effectively removed political differences in Parliament, which was dominated by an undistinguished liberal bloc with a landslide majority until after World War I. Two parliamentary factions alternated in government, one led by Sidney Sonnino and the other, by far the larger of the two, by Giolitti. At that time the Liberals governed in alliance with the Radicals, the Democrats and, eventually, the Reform Socialists.[4] This alliance governed against two smaller opposition: The Clericals, composed by some Vatican-oriented politicians, The Extreme, formed by the socialist faction which represented a real left in a present-day concept.[4]

Electoral reform

Changes made in 1912 widened the voting franchise to include literate men aged 21, men who had served in the army or navy (regardless of whether they were 21 years old), and illiterate men over the age of 30.[5] [6] This raised the number of eligible voters from 2,930,473 in 1909 to 8,443,205.[7] The electoral system remained single-member constituencies with two-round majority voting.[6]

Parties and leaders

PartyIdeologyLeaderStatus before election
Liberal Union (UL)LiberalismGiovanni Giolitti
Italian Socialist Party (PSI)SocialismCostantino Lazzari
Italian Radical Party (PR)RadicalismEttore Sacchi
Constitutional Democratic Party (PDC)Social liberalismseveral
Catholic Electoral Union (UECI)Christian democracyOttorino Gentiloni
Italian Reformist Socialist Party (PSRI)Social democracyLeonida Bissolati
Democratic Party (PD)Social liberalismseveral
Italian Republican Party (PRI)RepublicanismNapoleone Colajanni
Conservative Catholics (CC)Clericalismseveral

Results

Leading party by region

RegionFirst partySecond partyThird party
Abruzzo-MoliseULPSIPR
ApuliaULPSIPR
BasilicataULPRPSI
CalabriaULPRPSI
CampaniaULPRPSI
Emilia-RomagnaPSIULPR
LazioULPSIPR
LiguriaULPSIPR
LombardyPSIULPR
MarcheULPSIPR
PiedmontULPSIPR
SardiniaULPSIPR
SicilyULPRPSI
TuscanyPSIULPR
UmbriaPSIULPR
VenetoULPSIPR

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Piergiorgio Corbetta; Maria Serena Piretti, Atlante storico-elettorale d'Italia, Zanichelli, Bologna 2009
  3. Hershey. Amos S.. 1914. The Recent Italian Elections. American Political Science Review. en. 8. 1. 50–56. 10.2307/1945387. 1945387 . 0003-0554.
  4. http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9368300/Italian-Liberal-Party Italian Liberal Party
  5. Hershey. Amos S.. 1914. The Recent Italian Elections. American Political Science Review. en. 8. 1. 50–56. 10.2307/1945387. 1945387 . 0003-0554.
  6. Nohlen & Stöver, p1031
  7. Nohlen & Stöver, p1050