Legislature VIII of Italy explained

Legislature VIII of Italy
Native Name:VIII legislatura della Repubblica Italiana
Native Name Lang:it
Legislature:8th legislature
Coa Caption:Emblems of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies
House Type:bicameral
Houses:Chamber of Deputies
Senate of the Republic
Disbanded:
Preceded By:VII Legislature
Succeeded By:IX Legislature
Leader1 Type:President of the Senate
Leader2 Type:President of the Chamber of Deputies
Seats:630 (C)
315+ (S)
House1:Chamber of Deputies
House2:Senate
Voting System1:Proportional
Voting System2:Proportional
Last Election3:3 June 1979
Meeting Place:Palazzo Montecitorio, Rome (C)
Meeting Place2:Palazzo Madama, Rome (S)
Website:Eighth Legislature – Chamber of Deputies
Eighth Legislature – Senate
Constitution:Constitution of Italy

The Legislature VIII of Italy (Italian: VIII Legislatura della Repubblica Italiana) was the 8th legislature of the Italian Republic, and lasted from 20 June 1979 until 11 July 1983.[1] [2] Its composition was the one resulting from the general election of 3 June 1979.

Main chronology

The legislature saw the birth of a new political coalition that would have characterized the Italian politics during the 1980s. The so-called Pentapartito began in 1981 at a meeting of the Congress of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), when the christian democrat Arnaldo Forlani and socialist Bettino Craxi signed an agreement with the "blessing" of Giulio Andreotti. As the agreement was signed in a trailer, it was called the "pact of the camper." The pact was soon defined "CAF" for the initials of the signers: Craxi–Andreotti–Forlani. With this agreement, the DC recognized the equal dignity of the so-called "secular parties" of the majority (i.e., the Socialists, Social Democrats, Liberals and Republicans) and also guaranteed an alternation of government with them. In June 1981 republican Giovanni Spadolini became the first non-christian democrat to sworn in as Prime Minister of Italy.

With the birth of the Pentapartito, the possibility of the growth of the majority toward the Italian Communist Party (PCI) was finally dismissed.

During this legislature, the list of who belonged to the secret lodge P2 was published. The P2 was a Masonic lodge founded in 1945 that, by the time its Masonic charter was withdrawn in 1976, had transformed into a clandestine, pseudo-Masonic, ultraright[3] [4] [5] organization operating in contravention of Article 18 of the Constitution of Italy that banned secret associations. In its latter period, during which the lodge was headed by Licio Gelli, P2 was implicated in numerous Italian crimes and mysteries, including the collapse of the Vatican-affiliated Banco Ambrosiano, the murders of journalist Mino Pecorelli and banker Roberto Calvi, and corruption cases within the nationwide bribe scandal Tangentopoli. P2 came to light through the investigations into the collapse of Michele Sindona's financial empire.[6]

P2 was sometimes referred to as a "state within a state"[7] or a "shadow government".[8] The lodge had among its members prominent journalists, Members of Parliament, industrialists, and military leaders—including Silvio Berlusconi, who later became Prime Minister of Italy; the Savoy pretender to the Italian throne Victor Emmanuel;[9] and the heads of all three Italian intelligence services (at the time SISDE, SISMI and CESIS).

When searching Licio Gelli's villa in 1982, the police found a document called the "Plan for Democratic Rebirth", which called for a consolidation of the media, suppression of trade unions, and the rewriting of the Italian Constitution.[10]

The scandal subsequent the discovery of the members of the lodge brought to a deep crisis between the main political parties which were part of the government and ended with the official dissolution of the lodge with the Law 25 January 1982, n. 17.

Government

Prime MinisterPartyTerm of officeGovernmentComposition
Took officeLeft office
Francesco Cossiga
Christian Democracy4 August 19794 April 1980bgcolor=#D5EFFF Cossiga Ibgcolor=#D5EFFF DC PSDI PLI
4 April 198018 October 1980bgcolor=#D5EFFF Cossiga IIbgcolor=#D5EFFF DC PSI PRI
Arnaldo Forlani
Christian Democracy18 October 198028 June 1981bgcolor=#FFE5E5 Forlanibgcolor=#FFE5E5 DC PSI PSDI PRI
Giovanni Spadolini
Italian Republican Party28 June 198123 August 1982bgcolor=#FFE2D5 Spadolini IDC PSI PSDI PLI PRI
23 August 19821 December 1982bgcolor=#FFE2D5 Spadolini II
Amintore Fanfani
Christian Democracy1 December 19824 August 1983bgcolor=#D5EFFF Fanfani Vbgcolor=#D5EFFF DC PSI PSDI PLI

Parliamentary composition

Chamber of Deputies

Initial composition[11]
(20 June 1979)
Final composition
(11 July 1983)
Parliamentary groupSeatsParliamentary groupSeatsChange
Christian Democracy262Christian Democracy263 1
Italian Communist Party201Italian Communist Party193 8
Italian Socialist Party62Italian Socialist Party61 1
Italian Social Movement30Italian Social Movement29 1
Italian Democratic Socialist Party20Italian Democratic Socialist Party19 1
Radical Party18Radical Party11 7
Italian Republican Party16Italian Republican Party15 1
Italian Liberal Party9Italian Liberal Party9
Proletarian Unity Party6Proletarian Unity Party6
Mixed6Mixed24 18
Südtiroler Volkspartei4Südtiroler Volkspartei4
List for Trieste1List for Trieste1
Union valdôtaine1Union valdôtaine1
Independent Left11 11
Independent–Non inscrits7 7
Total seats630Total seats630

Senate of the Republic

Initial composition[12]
(20 June 1979)
Final composition
(11 July 1983)
Parliamentary groupSeatsParliamentary groupSeatsChange
Christian Democracy138Christian Democracy138
Italian Communist Party109Italian Communist Party94 15
Italian Socialist Party32Italian Socialist Party32
Italian Social Movement13Italian Social Movement13
Italian Democratic Socialist Party9Italian Democratic Socialist Party9
Italian Republican Party6Italian Republican Party6
Mixed8Mixed23 15
Italian Liberal Party2Italian Liberal Party2
Radical Party2Radical Party2
Südtiroler Volkspartei3Südtiroler Volkspartei3
Union valdôtaine1Union valdôtaine1
Independent Left15 15
Total seats315Total seats315

Senators for Life

SenatorMotivationAppointed byFromTill
Cesare MerzagoraMerits in the social fieldPresident Antonio Segni
Ferruccio ParriMerits in the social fieldPresident Antonio Segni8 December 1981 (deceased)
Eugenio MontaleMerits in the literary fieldPresident Giuseppe Saragat12 September 1981 (deceased)
Pietro NenniMerits in the social fieldPresident Giuseppe Saragat1 January 1980 (deceased)
Giuseppe SaragatFormer President of Italy ex officio
Amintore FanfaniMerits in the social fieldPresident Giovanni Leone
Giovanni LeoneFormer President of Italy ex officio
Leo ValianiMerits in the social fieldPresident Sandro Pertini12 January 1980
Eduardo De FilippoMerits in the literary and artistic field President Sandro Pertini26 September 1981
Camilla RaveraMerits in the social fieldPresident Sandro Pertini8 January 1982

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Camera dei Deputati – 8ª Legislatura . www.storia.camera.it . 21 February 2021 . it.
  2. Web site: Senato della Repubblica – 8ª Legislatura. www.senato.it . 21 February 2021. it.
  3. Book: Herman, Edward . Manufacturing consent the political economy of the mass media . limited . Pantheon Books . New York . 2002 . 152 . 0307801624 . ...the extreme right-wing organization Propaganda Due (P-2), ....
  4. Book: Naylor, R. T. . Hot money and the politics of debt . McGill-Queen's University Press . Montreal Que . 2004 . 84 . ...[Licio Gelli] organized a special, ultrasecret, ultrarightist lodge, Propaganda-Due . 0773572074 .
  5. Book: Bar, FirstName . Where have all the fascists gone . Ashgate . Aldershot, England Burlington, VT . 2007 . 39 . ... a similar strategy of infiltration within the military milieu by Italian radical right-wing terrorist groups and clandestine elite pressure groups such as Propaganda-Due (P-2) ... . 978-0754671541 .
  6. News: Masonic lodge affair leaves Italy shocked . The Times . 23 May 1981.
  7. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/26/newsid_4396000/4396893.stm BBC On This Day: 26 May 1981
  8. Jones, The Dark Heart of Italy, p. 187
  9. News: Hooper. John. The fall of the house of Savoy. The Guardian. 23 June 2006. 2 June 2016.
  10. Jones, The Dark Heart of Italy, p. 186
  11. Web site: VIII Legislatura della Repubblica italiana / Legislature / Camera dei deputati – Portale storico . storia.camera.it . 21 February 2021 . it.
  12. Web site: senato.it – Composizione dei gruppi parlamentari nella VIII Legislatura . www.senato.it . 21 February 2021 . it.