Mauro Scoccimarro Explained

Office:Minister of Finance
Primeminister1:Ferruccio Parri
Predecessor1:Antonio Pesenti
Term Start1:June 1945
Term End1:December 1945
Primeminister:Alcide De Gasperi
Predecessor:Himself
Successor:Pietro Campilli
Term Start:December 1945
Term End:January 1947
Office2:Minister of Occupied Italy
Primeminister2:Ivanoe Bonomi
Term Start2:12 December 1945
Term End2:21 June 1946
Predecessor2:Office established
Successor2:Office abolished
Birth Date:30 October 1895
Birth Place:Udine, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Kingdom of Italy
Death Place:Rome, Italian Republic
Party:Italian Communist Party
Alma Mater:Ca' Foscari University of Venice
Nationality:Italian

Mauro Scoccimarro (30 October 1895 – 2 January 1972) was an Italian economist and communist politician. He was one of the founders of the Italian Communist Party and served as the minister of finance between 1945 and 1947.[1]

Early life and education

Scoccimarro was born in Udine on 30 October 1895.[2] [3] His father was of Apulian origin and an employee of the railways.[4]

Scoccimarro graduated from Zanon Technical Institute in Udine in October 1913.[4] He attended Ca' Foscari University of Venice and graduated with a bachelor's degree in economics and political science in 1922.[2] He was involved in World War I and joined socialist party in 1917, but following the party congress in Livorno in 1921 he left the party to establish the Communist Party.[1] [5]

Career

Scoccimarro was among the Italian members of the fourth Comintern meeting held in 1922.[5] In 1923 he was made a member of the Communist Party's secretariat together with Antonio Gramsci and Palmiro Togliatti.[1] The same year the party leader Amadeo Bordiga was arrested, and the Comintern Executive Committee assigned a group of party members to lead the party, including Scoccimarro, Palmiro Togliatti, Egidio Gennari, Angelo Tasca and Umberto Terracini.[6] In the party Scoccimarro was part of the faction led by Antonio Gramsci.[7]

Scoccimarro was arrested by the Fascists in 1926 and was sentenced to 21 years in prison.[1] He was released from the prison in 1937, but sent to the Island of Ponza, and then to the Island of Ventotene where he lived under police surveillance until July 1943 when the rule of Benito Mussolini, fascist leader of Italy, was toppled.[1] Following the liberation of Rome in June 1944 Scoccimarro acted as high commissioner for the expulsion of fascists and was the minister of occupied Italy.[1] [8] [9] In the latter capacity he found an opportunity to strengthen the positions of Italian communists in the northern regions of Italy.[8]

Scoccimarro's next post was minister of finance which he held between June and December 1945 in the cabinet of Ferruccio Parri and then, between December 1945 and January 1947 in the second cabinet of Alcide De Gasperi.[10] Scoccimarro was elected as a senator in 1948 and served there until 1972.[1] He also served in different posts in the Communist Party. As of 1966 he was the president of the central control committee.[11] In addition, he was vice president of the Senate from 1958 to 1972.[2]

Death

Scoccimarro died in Rome on 2 January 1972.[2]

Views and works

Scoccimarro was part of the Stalinist faction in the Communist Party in the early 1960s.[12]

Scoccimarro was author of the following books in addition to his other writings:

Notes and References

  1. News: Mauro Scoccimarro Dies at 76; A Shaper of Italian Communism. 1 August 2021. Rome. 31. The New York Times. 3 June 1972.
  2. Web site: Mauro Scoccimarro. ANPI. 1 August 2021. it.
  3. Book: Guido Samarani. Janick Marina Schaufelbuehl. Marco Wyss. Valeria Zanier. Europe and China in the Cold War. 2018. Brill. 978-90-04-38559-7. 134–150. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004388123_008. History and Memory: Italian Communists’ Views of the Chinese Communist Party and the prc During the Early Cold War. 10.1163/9789004388123_008. 159022732. Leiden; Boston, MA.
  4. Web site: Scoccimarro Mauro (1895-1972). Biographical Dictionary of Friulani. 1 August 2021. it.
  5. Book: John Riddell. To the Masses. Proceedings of the Third Congress of the Communist International, 1921. 2015. 91. Brill. Leiden; Boston. 9789004288034. 1250. 10.1163/9789004288034_038. John Riddell (Marxist).
  6. Lelio La Porta. May 1922-November 1923, Davide Bidussa, Francesco Giasi and Maria Luisa Righi. June 2018. 2. International Gramsci Journal. 4. 165.
  7. Fulvio Bellini. The Italian CP: Part I: The Transformation of a Party, 1921-1945. Problems of Communism. 36. 1956. 39.
  8. Norman Kogan. The Italian Action Party and the Institutional Question. The Western Political Quarterly. June 1953. 6. 2. 10.2307/442162. 293. 442162.
  9. Stanislao G. Pugliese. Death in Exile: The Assassination of Carlo Rosselli. Journal of Contemporary History. 1997. 32. 3. 315 . 10.1177/002200949703200302. 154546885.
  10. Martinez Oliva. Juan Carlos. The Italian Stabilization of 1947: Domestic and International Factors. Institute of European Studies. 2007. 17.
  11. Book: 3-PA59. Translations on International Communist Developments. U.S. Joint Publications Research Service. Washington, DC. 815–822. 1966.
  12. Italy: Grey-Flannel Communism. 28 February 2022. Time Magazine. 16 February 1962.