1948 Italian general election explained

Country:Italy
Type:legislative
Previous Election:1946 Italian general election
Previous Year:1946
Outgoing Members:Constituent Assembly of Italy
Next Election:1953 Italian general election
Next Year:1953
Elected Members:Legislature I of Italy
Seats For Election:All 574 seats in the Chamber of Deputies288 seats needed for a majority237 seats in the Senate172 seats needed for a majority
Registered:29,117,554 25,874,809
Turnout:26,855,741 92.2%
23,842,919 92.2%
Leader1:Alcide De Gasperi
Leader Since1:29 December 1944
Party1:Christian Democracy (Italy)
Leaders Seat1:Trento
Seats1:305 / 131
Popular Vote1:12,740,042
10,899,640
Percentage1:48.5%
48.1%
Leader2:Palmiro Togliatti
Leader Since2:28 December 1947
Party2:Popular Democratic Front (Italy)
Leaders Seat2:Rome (C)
Seats2:183 / 72
Popular Vote2:8,136,637
6,969,122
Percentage2:31.0%
30.8%
Leader3:Giuseppe Saragat
Leader Since3:11 January 1947
Party3:Socialist Unity (Italy)
Leaders Seat3:Turin
Seats3:33 / 10
Popular Vote3:1,858,116
943,219
Percentage3:7.1%
4.6%
Leader4:Roberto Lucifero
Leader Since4:3 December 1947
Party4:National Bloc (Italy, 1948)
Color4:2975C2
Leaders Seat4:Calabria
Seats4:19 / 7
Popular Vote4:1,003,727
1,222,419
Percentage4:3.8%
5.4%
Leader5:Alfredo Covelli
Leader Since5:11 June 1946
Party5:Monarchist National Party
Leaders Seat5:Benevento
Seats5:14 / 3
Popular Vote5:729,078
393,510
Percentage5:2.8%
1.7%
Leader6:Randolfo Pacciardi
Leader Since6:20 January 1947
Party6:Italian Republican Party
Leaders Seat6:Pisa
Seats6:9 / 4
Popular Vote6:651,875
594,178
Percentage6:2.5%
2.6%
Prime Minister
Posttitle:Prime Minister after the election
Before Election:Alcide De Gasperi
Before Party:Christian Democracy (Italy)
After Election:Alcide De Gasperi
After Party:Christian Democracy (Italy)

General elections were held in Italy on 18 April 1948 to elect the first Parliament of the Italian Republic.[1]

After the Soviet-backed coup in Czechoslovakia in February 1948, the U.S. became alarmed about Soviet intentions in Central Europe and feared that Italy would be drawn into the Soviet sphere of influence if the leftist Popular Democratic Front (Italian abbr.: FDP), which consisted of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) and the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), were to win the 1948 general election. As the last month of the election campaign began, Time magazine published an article which argued that an FDP victory would push Italy to "the brink of catastrophe".[2]

The U.S. consequently intervened in the election by heavily funding the centrist coalition led by Christian Democracy (DC) and launching an anti-communist propaganda campaign in Italy. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) claims that the Soviet Union responded by sending exorbitant funds to the FDP coalition. However, the PCI disputed this claim and, in contrast, expressed its discontent with what it perceived as a lack of support from the Soviets.

The DC coalition won the election by a comfortable margin and defeated the FDP coalition.[3] The DC coalition went on to form a government without the leftists, who had been expelled from the government coalition in the May 1947 crises and remained frozen out.

Electoral system

The pure party-list proportional representation chosen two years before for the election of the Constituent Assembly was adopted for the Chamber of Deputies. Italian provinces were divided into 31 constituencies, each electing a group of candidates. In each constituency, seats were divided between open lists using the largest remainder method with the Imperiali quota. Remaining votes and seats transferred to the national level, where special closed lists of national leaders received the last seats using the Hare quota.

For the Senate, 237 single-seat constituencies were created. The candidates needed a two-thirds majority to be elected, but only 15 aspiring senators were elected this way. All remaining votes and seats were grouped in party lists and regional constituencies, where the D'Hondt method was used: Inside the lists, candidates with the best percentages were elected.

This electoral system became standard in Italy, and was used until 1993.

Campaign

The election remain unmatched in verbal aggression and fanaticism in Italy's period of democracy. According to the historian Gianni Corbi the 1948 election was "the most passionate, the most important, the longest, the dirtiest, and the most uncertain electoral campaign in Italian history".[4] The election was between two competing visions of the future of Italian society. On the right, a Roman Catholic, conservative and capitalist Italy, represented by the governing Christian Democrats of De Gasperi. On the left a secular, revolutionary and socialist society, linked to the Soviet Union and represented by the FDP coalition led by the PCI.[4]

The Christian Democrat campaign pointed to the recent communist coup in Czechoslovakia. It warned that in Communist countries, "children send parents to jail", "children are owned by the state", and told voters that disaster would strike Italy if the Communists were to take power.[5] [6] Another slogan was "In the secrecy of the polling booth, God sees you – Stalin doesn't."[7]

The FDP campaign focused on living standards and avoided embarrassing questions of foreign policy, such as UN membership (vetoed by the Soviet Union) and Yugoslav control of Trieste, or losing American financial and food aid. The PCI led the FDP coalition and had effectively marginalised the PSI, which suffered loss in terms of parliamentary seats and political power. The PSI had also been hurt by the secession of a social-democratic faction led by Giuseppe Saragat, which contested the election with the concurrent list of Socialist Unity.

The PCI had difficulties in restraining its more militant members, who, in the period immediately after the war, had engaged in violent acts of reprisals. The areas affected by the violence (the so-called "Red Triangle" of Emilia, or parts of Liguria around Genoa and Savona, for instance) had previously seen episodes of brutality committed by the Fascists during Benito Mussolini's regime and the Italian Resistance during the Allied advance through Italy.

Foreign interference

See main article: CIA activities in Italy.

See also: Foreign interventions by the United States.

The 1948 general election was greatly influenced by the Cold War that was underway between the Soviet Union and the United States.[8] After his defeat in the election, PCI leader Palmiro Togliatti stated on 22 April that: "The elections were not free... Brutal foreign intervention was used consisting of a threat to starve the country by withholding ERP aid if it voted for the Democratic Front... The menace to use the atom bomb against towns or regions" that voted pro-communist.[9] The U.S. government's Voice of America radio began broadcasting anti-Communist propaganda to Italy on 24 March 1948.[10] The CIA, by its own admission, gave US$1 million (equivalent to $ in) to what they referred to as "center parties"[11] and was accused of publishing forged letters to discredit the leaders of the PCI.[12] The National Security Act of 1947, that made foreign covert operations possible, had been signed into law about six months earlier by the American President Harry S. Truman.

U.S. agencies also sent ten million letters, made numerous short-wave radio broadcasts, and funded the publishing of books and articles, all of which warned Italians of the "consequences" of a communist victory. Overall, the U.S. funnelled $10 million to $20 million (equivalent to $ to $ in) into the country for specifically anti-PCI purposes. The CIA also made use of off-the-books sources of financing to interfere in the election: millions of dollars from the Economic Cooperation Administration affiliated with the Marshall Plan[13] and more than $10 million in captured Nazi money were steered to anti-communist propaganda.[14] In this regard, CIA operative F. Mark Wyatt claimed: "We had bags of money that we delivered to selected politicians, to defray their political expenses, their campaign expenses, for posters, for pamphlets."[15]

Wyatt also claimed that, in the lead up to the election, the PCI received exorbitant funds of up to $10 million per month from the Soviet Union and that Italian authorities were aware of the Soviets' activities.[12] This was disputed by the PCI, which voiced its frustration at the Soviets' lack of support for the FDP's campaign.[16] Italian historian Alessandro Brogi dismisses the CIA's claims as "overexaggerated" and notes that the Soviets only undertook "ad hoc last minute diplomatic [and] financial action" because it feared that inaction in Italy would set a precedent for U.S. intervention in Eastern Europe. Despite amicable meetings in the postwar years between top PCI official Pietro Secchia and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin,[17] the Soviets were apprehensive about committing to Italy financially[16] and only provided "occasional and modest" funds to the PCI.[18] [19]

The Christian Democrats eventually won the 1948 election with 48 per cent of the vote, and the FDP received 31 per cent. The CIA's practice of influencing the political situation was repeated in every Italian election for at least the next 24 years.[15] No leftist coalition won a general election until 1996. That was partly because of Italians' traditional bent for conservatism and, even more importantly, the Cold War, with the U.S. closely watching Italy, in their determination to maintain a vital NATO presence amidst the Mediterranean and retain the Yalta-agreed status quo in western Europe.[20]

The Irish government, motivated by the country's devout Catholicism, also interfered in the election by funnelling the modern day equivalent of €2 million through the Irish Embassy to the Vatican, which then distributed it to Catholic politicians. Joseph Walshe, Ireland's ambassador to the Vatican, had privately suggested secretly funding Azione Cattolica.[21]

Parties and leaders

PartyIdeologyLeader
Christian Democracy (DC)Christian democracyAlcide De Gasperi
Popular Democratic Front (FDP)Socialism, communismPalmiro Togliatti, Pietro Nenni
Socialist Unity (US)Social democracyGiuseppe Saragat
National Bloc (BN)Conservative liberalismRoberto Lucifero
Monarchist National Party (PNM)MonarchismAlfredo Covelli
Italian Republican Party (PRI)Republicanism, reformismRandolfo Pacciardi
Italian Social Movement (MSI)Neo-fascismGiorgio Almirante

Results

Christian Democracy won a sweeping victory, taking 48.5 per cent of the vote and 305 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 131 seats in the Senate. With an absolute majority in both chambers, DC leader and premier Alcide De Gasperi could have formed an exclusively DC government. Instead, he formed a "centrist" coalition with Liberals, Republicans and Social Democrats. De Gasperi formed three ministries during the parliamentary term, the second one in 1950 after the defection of the Liberals, who hoped for more rightist politics, and the third one in 1951 after the defection of the Social-democrats, who hoped for more leftist politics.

Following a provision of the new republican constitution, all living democratic deputies elected during the 1924 general election and deposed by the National Fascist Party in 1926, automatically became members of the first republican Senate.

Chamber of Deputies

By constituency

ConstituencyTotal
seats
Seats won
DCFDPUSBNPNMPRIMSIOthers
Turin2613103
Cuneo169421
Genoa19982
Milan3618144
Como14941
Brescia191441
Mantua1055
Trentino9513
Verona281972
Venice161042
Udine14932
Bologna2471322
Parma197102
Florence1367
Pisa15771
Siena936
Ancona179611
Perugia1156
Rome3520101121
L'Aquila161051
Campobasso431
Naples311771141
Benevento1811322
Bari2212721
Lecce169421
Potenza642
Catanzaro2413821
Catania26155222
Palermo251362211
Cagliari139311
Aosta Valley11
National214443222
Total574305183331914965

Senate of the Republic

By constituency

ConstituencyTotal
seats
Seats won
DCFDPUSBNUSPRIPRIPNMOthersInd.
Piedmont178621
Aosta Valley11
Lombardy3118103
Trentino-Alto Adige642
Veneto191441
Friuli-Venezia Giulia6411
Liguria8431
Emilia-Romagna176911
Tuscany15771
Umbria633
Marche7421
Lazio161051
Abruzzo642
Molise22
Campania211142112
Apulia158511
Basilicata6321
Calabria10532
Sicily221251112
Sardinia63111
Total237131728744344

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Nohlen . Dieter . Stöver . Philip . Elections in Europe: A data handbook . 2010 . Nomos . 9783832956097 . 1048 . 1st . 22 December 2019.
  2. News: ITALY: Fateful Day . 22 December 2019 . Time . 22 March 1948.
  3. Drake . Richard . The Soviet Dimension of Italian Communism . Journal of Cold War Studies . July 2004 . 6 . 3 . 115–119 . 10.1162/1520397041447355 . 57564743 .
  4. Ventresca, From Fascism to Democracy, p. 4
  5. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,779791,00.html "ITALY: Show of Force"
  6. http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,798374,00.html "THE NATIONS: How to Hang On"
  7. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4087420.stm "Fertility vote galvanises Vatican"
  8. Brogi, Confronting America, pp. 101–110
  9. "Italian elections," Facts on File 18 – 24 April 1948, p. 125G.
  10. " Italy and Trieste," Facts on File 21 – 27 March 1948, p. 93E
  11. CIA memorandum to the Forty Committee (National Security Council), presented to the Select Committee on Intelligence, United States House of Representatives (the Pike Committee) during closed hearings held in 1975. The bulk of the committee's report that contained the memorandum was leaked to the press in February 1976 and first appeared in book form as CIA – The Pike Report (Nottingham, England, 1977). The memorandum appears on pp. 204–5 of this book.
  12. News: CNN Cold War Episode 3: Marshall Plan. Interview with F. Mark Wyatt, former CIA operative in Italy during the election. . . 1998–1999 . 17 July 2006 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20010831150516/http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/episodes/03/interviews/wyatt/ . 31 August 2001 .
  13. Book: Corke, Sarah-Jane. US Covert Operations and Cold War Strategy: Truman, Secret Warfare and the CIA, 1945–53 . 12 September 2007. Routledge. 9781134104130. 49–58. en.
  14. Peter Dale Scott, "Operation Paper: The United States and Drugs in Thailand and Burma" 米国とタイ・ビルマの麻薬, Asia-Pacific Journal Japan Focus, 1 November 2010, Volume 8, Issue 44, Number 2, citing Christopher Andrew, For the President’s Eyes Only (New York: HarperCollins, 1995), 172
  15. https://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/us/06wyatt.html F. Mark Wyatt, 86, C.I.A. Officer, Is Dead
  16. Brogi, Confronting America, p. 109
  17. Pons, Silvio (2001), "Stalin, Togliatti, and the Origins of the Cold War in Europe", Journal of Cold War Studies, Volume 3, Number 2, Spring 2001, pp. 3–27
  18. Ventresca, From Fascism to Democracy, p. 269
  19. Callanan, Covert Action in the Cold War, pp. 41–45
  20. Web site: N.A.T.O. Gladio, and the strategy of tension. NATO's Secret Armies. Operation Gladio and Terrorism in Western Europe. Daniele Ganser. October 2005. 21 July 2006.
  21. https://www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/irish-state-secretly-intervened-in-italian-1948-general-election-1.2002970 "Irish state secretly intervened in Italian 1948 general election"