Amintore Fanfani

(Redirected from Fanfani)

Amintore Fanfani (Italian pronunciation: [aˈmintore faɱˈfaːni]; 6 February 1908 – 20 November 1999)[2] was an Italian politician and statesman, who served as 32nd prime minister of Italy for five separate terms. He was one of the best-known Italian politicians after the Second World War and a historical figure of the left-wing faction of Christian Democracy.[3] He is also considered one of the founders of the modern Italian centre-left.[4]

Amintore Fanfani
Fanfani in 1965
Prime Minister of Italy
In office
18 April 1987 – 29 July 1987
PresidentFrancesco Cossiga
Preceded byBettino Craxi
Succeeded byGiovanni Goria
In office
1 December 1982 – 4 August 1983
PresidentSandro Pertini
Preceded byGiovanni Spadolini
Succeeded byBettino Craxi
In office
27 July 1960 – 22 June 1963
PresidentGiovanni Gronchi
Antonio Segni
DeputyAttilio Piccioni
Preceded byFernando Tambroni
Succeeded byGiovanni Leone
In office
2 July 1958 – 16 February 1959
PresidentGiovanni Gronchi
DeputyAntonio Segni
Preceded byAdone Zoli
Succeeded byAntonio Segni
In office
19 January 1954 – 10 February 1954
PresidentLuigi Einaudi
Preceded byGiuseppe Pella
Succeeded byMario Scelba
Acting President of Italy
In office
15 June 1978 – 9 July 1978
Prime MinisterGiulio Andreotti
Preceded byGiovanni Leone
Succeeded bySandro Pertini
President of the Senate of the Republic
In office
9 July 1985 – 17 April 1987
Preceded byFrancesco Cossiga
Succeeded byGiovanni Malagodi
In office
5 July 1976 – 1 December 1982
Preceded byGiovanni Spagnolli
Succeeded byTommaso Morlino
In office
5 June 1968 – 26 June 1973
Preceded byEnnio Zelioli-Lanzini
Succeeded byGiovanni Spagnolli
Ministerial offices
Minister of the Budget
In office
13 April 1988 – 23 July 1989
Prime MinisterCiriaco De Mita
Preceded byEmilio Colombo
Succeeded byPaolo Cirino Pomicino
Minister of the Interior
In office
29 July 1987 – 13 April 1988
Prime MinisterGiovanni Goria
Preceded byOscar Luigi Scalfaro
Succeeded byAntonio Gava
In office
16 July 1953 – 19 January 1954
Prime MinisterAlcide De Gasperi
Giuseppe Pella
Preceded byMario Scelba
Succeeded byGiulio Andreotti
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
24 February 1966 – 25 June 1968
Prime MinisterAldo Moro
Preceded byAldo Moro
Succeeded byGiuseppe Medici
In office
5 March 1965 – 30 December 1965
Prime MinisterAldo Moro
Preceded byAldo Moro
Succeeded byAldo Moro
In office
2 July 1958 – 16 February 1959
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byGiuseppe Pella
Succeeded byGiuseppe Pella
Minister of Agriculture
In office
26 July 1951 – 16 July 1953
Prime MinisterAlcide De Gasperi
Preceded byAntonio Segni
Succeeded byRocco Salomone
Minister of Labour
In office
1 June 1947 – 27 January 1950
Prime MinisterAlcide De Gasperi
Preceded byGiuseppe Romita
Succeeded byAchille Marazza
Party political offices
Secretary of the Christian Democracy
In office
17 June 1973 – 25 July 1975
Preceded byArnaldo Forlani
Succeeded byBenigno Zaccagnini
In office
16 July 1954 – 31 January 1959
Preceded byAlcide De Gasperi
Succeeded byAldo Moro
Parliamentary offices
Member of the Senate of the Republic
Life tenure
10 March 1972 – 20 November 1999
Appointed byGiovanni Leone
In office
5 June 1968 – 9 March 1972
ConstituencyArezzo
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
8 May 1948 – 4 June 1968
ConstituencySiena–Arezzo–Grosseto
Member of the Constituent Assembly
In office
25 June 1946 – 31 January 1948
ConstituencySiena–Arezzo–Grosseto
Personal details
Born(1908-02-06)6 February 1908
Pieve Santo Stefano, Tuscany, Kingdom of Italy
Died20 November 1999(1999-11-20) (aged 91)
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Political partyNational Fascist Party
(1935–1943)
Christian Democracy
(1943–1994)
Italian People's Party
(1994–1999)
Height1.63 m (5 ft 4 in)[1]
Spouses
Biancarosa Provasoli
(m. 1939; died 1968)
(m. 1975)
Children7
Alma materCatholic University of the Sacred Heart
Occupation
  • Politician
  • economist

Beginning as a protégé of Alcide De Gasperi, Fanfani achieved cabinet rank at a young age and occupied all the major offices of state over the course of a forty-year political career. In foreign policy, he was one of the most vocal supporters of European integration and established closer relations with the Arab world.[5] In domestic policy, he was known for his cooperation with the Italian Socialist Party, which brought to an alliance that radically changed the country, by such measures as the nationalization of Enel, the extension of compulsory education, and the introduction of a more progressive tax system.[6]

Fanfani served in numerous ministerial positions, including Minister of the Interior, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Labour, Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Budget and Economic Planning. He served also as President of the Italian Senate for three terms between 1968 and 1987. He was appointed senator for life in 1972. Six years later, after the resignation of Giovanni Leone, he provisionally assumed the functions of President of the Republic as chairman of the upper house of the Italian Parliament, until the election of Sandro Pertini. Despite his long political experience and personal prestige, Fanfani never succeeded in being elected head of state.

Fanfani and the long-time liberal leader Giovanni Giolitti still hold the record as the only statesmen to have served as prime minister of Italy in five non-consecutive periods of office. He was sometimes nicknamed Cavallo di Razza ("Purebred Horse"),[7] thanks to his innate political ability; however, his detractors simply called him "Pony" due to his small size.[8]

Early life

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Fanfani was born in Pieve Santo Stefano, in the province of Arezzo, Tuscany, in a middle-class family. His father, Giuseppe Fanfani (1878–1943), was a carpenter's son who succeeded in studying and graduating in law, starting the profession of lawyer and notary; while his mother Annita Leo (1884–1968) was a housewife. Fanfani, who was the first of nine children, grew up in an observant Catholic family.[9] Fanfani was named after Amintore Galli, who composed the socialist anthem the Workers' Hymn; Fanfani's siblings were similarly named with eclectic or unusual names.[10]

In 1920, at only 12 years old, Fanfani joined Catholic Action (AC), of which he became a local leader after a few years.[11] After attending the scientific lyceum of Arezzo, he graduated in political and economic sciences in 1930 at the Catholic University in Milan, with the thesis Economic Repercussions and Effects of the English Schism.[12] He was the author of a number of important works on economic history dealing with religion and the development of capitalism in the Renaissance and Reformation in Europe. His thesis was published in Italian and then in English as Catholicism, Capitalism and Protestantism in 1935.[13]

Under the regime of Benito Mussolini, he joined the National Fascist Party (PNF) supporting the corporatist ideas of the regime promoting collaboration between the classes, which he defended in many articles. "Some day", he once wrote, "the European continent will be organized into a vast supranational area guided by Italy and Germany. Those areas will take authoritarian governments and synchronize their constitutions with Fascist principles."[14]

He also wrote for the official magazine of racism in Fascist Italy, The Defence of the Race (Italian: La difesa della razza). In 1938, he was among the 330 that signed the antisemitic Manifesto of Race (Italian: Manifesto della razza)[15] – culminating in laws that stripped the Italian Jews of any position in the government, university or professions which many previously had. Fanfani also became a professor at the School of Fascist Mysticism in Milan.[16]

On 22 April 1939, Fanfani married Biancarosa Provasoli, a 25-year-old lady who grew up in a bourgeois family from Milan.[17] The couple had two sons and five daughters, born between 1940 and 1955.[18]

During the years he spent in Milan, he knew Giuseppe Dossetti and Giorgio La Pira. They formed a group known as the "little professors" who lived ascetically in monastery cells and walked barefoot. They formed the nucleus of Democratic Initiative, an intensely Catholic but economically reformist wing of the post-war Christian Democratic Party,[19][20] holding meetings to discuss Catholicism and society.

In Milan, Fanfani wrote "Catholicism and Protestantism in the historical development of Capitalism", in which he proposed a bold interpretation of the phenomena of capitalism, with particular reference to the conditioning of the religious factors and fundamentally disagree with the thesis of Max Weber. This work brought him to the forefront among US Catholics. After the surrender of Italy to the Allied armed forces on 8 September 1943, the group disbanded. Until the Liberation in April 1945, Fanfani fled to Switzerland dodging military service, and organized university courses for Italian refugees.[21]

Early political career

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Fanfani in 1948

Upon his return to Italy, he joined the newly founded Christian Democracy (DC), of which his friend Dossetti was serving as deputy secretary. He was as one of the youngest party leaders and a protégé of Alcide De Gasperi, the undisputed leader of the party for the following decade.[22] Fanfani represented a particular ideological position, that of conservative Catholics who favoured socio-economic interventionism, which was very influential in the 1950s and 1960s but which gradually lost its appeal. "Capitalism requires such a dread of loss," he once wrote, "such a forgetfulness of human brotherhood, such a certainty that a man's neighbour is merely a customer to be gained or a rival to be overthrown, and all these are inconceivable in the Catholic conception [...] There is an unbridgeable gulf between the Catholic and the capitalist conception of life."[14] Private economic initiative, in his view, was justifiable only if harnessed to the common good.[23]

In the 1946 election, he was elected to the Constituent Assembly for the constituency of Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto, which would remain his political stronghold for all his career. As a constituent, he was appointed in the Commission that drafted the text of the new Republican Constitution. The first article of the new constitution reflected Fanfani's philosophy. He proposed an article, which read: "Italy is a democratic republic founded on labor."[24] After two years, in the 1948 general election, he was elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies, with more than 35,000 votes.[25]

Under De Gasperi, Fanfani took on a succession of ministries. From June 1947 until January 1950, he served as Minister of Labour;[26] while from July 1951 to July 1953, he was Minister of Agriculture,[27] and from July 1953 to January 1954 he served as Minister of the Interior in the caretaker government of Giuseppe Pella.[28] As Minister of Labour, he developed the so-called "Fanfani house" program for government-built workers' homes and put 200,000 of Italy's unemployed to work on a reforestation program. As Minister of Agriculture, he set in motion much of the Christian Democrats' land reform program. On 28 February 1949, Fanfani launched a seven-year plan for popular housing to increase the stock of economic housing by means of construction or purchase of economic accommodation. The law also established a special housing fund, the so-called "INA-Casa", within the National Institute for Insurance (Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni, or INA).[29]

"He can keep going for 36 hours on catnaps, apples and a few sips of water," according to a news report in Time magazine. Once, when someone proposed Fanfani for yet another ministry, De Gasperi refused. "If I keep on appointing Fanfani to various ministries," he said, "I am sure that one of these days I will open the door to my study and find Fanfani sitting at my desk."[20]

Leader of the party and prime minister

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First government

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On 12 January 1954, after only 5 months in power, Prime Minister Giuseppe Pella was forced to resign, after a strong confrontation with many members of DC, regarding the appointment of Salvatore Aldisio as new Minister of Agriculture.[30][31] Fanfani was then appointed by President Luigi Einaudi as new head of the government.[32] Fanfani formed a one-party government composed only by members of the Christian Democracy. He chose, among others, Giulio Andreotti, another protégé of De Gasperi, as Minister of the Interior, Adone Zoli as Minister of Finance and Paolo Emilio Taviani as Minister of Defence.[33][34]

However, the cabinet lasted only 23 days when it failed to win approval in the Parliament, being rejected by the Chamber of Deputies with 260 votes in favor, 303 votes against and 12 abstentions out of 563 present. On 10 February 1954, Mario Scelba sworn in as new prime minister.[35] Fanfani's first government was the shortest-lived cabinet in the history of the Italian Republic. Since De Gasperi's retirement in 1953 Fanfani emerged as the most probable successor, a role confirmed by his appointment as party secretary in June 1954, a position that he would held until March 1959.[36]

Secretary of the Christian Democracy

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Fanfani during a rally in 1954

As secretary, he reorganized and rejuvenated the national party organization of the Christian Democrats, decreasing its strong dependence on the Catholic Church and the national government which had typified the De Gasperi period.[37] During his tenure, he built a close relation with Enrico Mattei, the CEO of Eni. They remained key allies until Mattei's death in October 1962.[38]

However, his activist and sometimes authoritarian style,[39] as well as his reputation as an economic reformer, ensured that the moderate and the right-wingers within the DC, who opposed the state's intrusion into the country's economic life, regarded him with distrust. His indefatigable energy and his passion for efficiency carried him far in politics, but he was rarely able to exploit fully the opportunities that he created. As an anonymous Christian Democrat bigwig once remarked: "Fanfani has colleagues, associates, acquaintances and subordinates, but I have never heard much about his friends."[14]

In May 1955, Einaudi's term as president of the Italian Republic came to an end, and Parliament had to choose his successor. Fanfani was promoting for the office the liberal Cesare Merzagora, who was then President of the Senate. However the right-wing of the party, led by Giuseppe Pella and Giulio Andreotti, organized an internal coup to get the Christian Democrat Giovanni Gronchi elected instead. The move received the surprising support of the Italian Communist Party (PCI) and Italian Socialist Party (PSI), and also of the Monarchist National Party (PNM) and the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI). After a bitter battle and the final crumbling of the centrist front, on 29 April 1955 Gronchi was elected President of the Republic with 658 votes out of 883.[40]

During his secretariat, he built good relations both with United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, culminated to a state visit to Washington D.C. in August 1956.[41] The brutal suppression of 1956 Hungarian Revolution, saw him coordinating a strong anti-communist propaganda in the country.[42]

General election in 1958 and second government

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Fanfani, as member of the Chamber of Deputies in 1963

In the 1958 general election, Fanfani ran as secretary of the Christian Democrats and main candidate to become the next prime minister. The electoral result was similar to the one of five years before. The Christian Democrats gained 42.4% of votes, nearly doubling Palmiro Togliatti's Communist Party, which came second. However, the poor results of the other small centrist and secular parties meant the continuation of the same problems of political instability within the centrist coalition that had characterised the previous legislature.[43]

The Christian Democracy resulted even more polarized between Fanfani's leftist faction and the opposite one which urged for a rightist policy; Fanfani relaunched his reformist agenda, advocating for a dialogue with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), which had stopped its ties with the communists after the Hungarian Revolution.[44] However, a government between DC and PSI was probably too premature due to the strong opposition of DC's right-wing, so, on 2 July 1958, Fanfani was sworn in as new prime minister at the head of a coalition government with the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI), and a case-by-case support of the Italian Republican Party (PRI).[45]

He then decided not to resign immediately as secretary of the DC, wanting to bring the party behind him, at least until a new congress. He started an active foreign policy, along the lines of the so-called "neo-atlantism", implementing a more autonomous foreign policy from the United States, presenting Italy as the main regional power of the Mediterranean Basin, trying to avoid the increase of Soviet Union's sphere of influence over the Arab countries.[46] However, he failed to leave a mark in domestic politics, despite his ambitious proposal of a 10-year plan for the development of public school, which was approved by the Parliament but not implemented. His economic policy was characterized by an increasing public spending.[47]

The unprecedented concentration of power that he had achieved was also the main reason of his second government's decline. The outraged conservative opposition resulted in a progressive breakdown of the internal majority faction, "Democratic Initiative".[48] In January 1959, a conspicuous group of Christian Democrats started voting against their own government, forcing Fanfani to resign on 26 January 1959, after only six months in power.[49] On 16 February 1959, Antonio Segni sworn in as new prime minister.[50] In March 1959, Fanfani resigned as party's secretary too, and Aldo Moro became the new leader. After few weeks, he founded a new faction, known as "Nuove Cronache" ("New Chronicles").[51]

In party's congress in October 1959, Moro was slightly confirmed secretary, after a thought battle with Fanfani, who was defeated thanks to the decisive vote of the right-wing faction of Mario Scelba and Giulio Andreotti.[52]

When the Italian Liberal Party (PLI) withdrew its support to Segni's government, Fanfani cooperated with Moro, attempting to establish a new centre-left government, with a case-by-case socialist support. However, this pact was strongly opposed by ecclesiastical hierarchies as well as the usual opposition of the DC's right-wing. After Fanfani's failure, Fernando Tambroni was appointed new prime minister.[53] Tambroni, a right-wing conservative, received a decisive vote of confidence by the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI). The MSI had been banned by any type of political power since its birth under the theory of the "Constitutional Arch", which stated that any government or party which had voted the Italian Constitution, had to refuse any relationship with fascist and monarchist forces, seen as anti-constitutional groups. Strikes and revolts causing some casualties erupted through the country, and Tambroni had to resign within few months. On 26 July 1960, Fanfani returned to the premiership, this time with an openly centre-left program supported by the PSI abstention.[54]

Third and fourth government

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His third government was formed only by DC ministers, and included also members of the party's right-wing, like Giulio Andreotti, Giuseppe Pella, Mario Scelba and Guido Gonella, who served respectively as ministers of Defence, Budget Interior and Justice. The cabinet was externally supported by PSDI, PRI and PLI.[55] With Fanfani as prime minister and Moro as secretary of the party, the so-called Organic Centre-left period officially began.[56]

 
Fanfani with John F. Kennedy at the White House, in 1963

In February 1962, after the national congress of the Christian Democracy, Fanfani reorganised his cabinet and gained the benign abstention of the socialist leader Pietro Nenni.[57]

During this term as prime minister, Fanfani carried out a number of reforms in areas such as health, education, and social security. On 8 April 1962 the cabinet introduced broad provisions covering building areas. Local governments were obliged to provide plans of areas suitable for economic housing, while strict price controls for building areas were introduced to prevent speculation.[29]

On 31 December 1962, the Parliament approved a law that extended compulsory education to the age of 14 and introduced a single unified curriculum, lasting for a 3-year period after primary education.[29] On 12 August 1962, Fanfani introduced a supplementary pension payment, equal to one-twelfth of the annual amount of pension minima, while also introducing child supplements for pensioners.[29] Moreover, on 5 March 1963, he introduced a voluntary pension insurance scheme for housewives.[29]

On 19 January 1963, the government proposed a bill that extended the insurance against occupational diseases to artisans, while general improvements to cash benefits were carried out: all pensions were to be adjusted every third year to the minimum contractual wage in the respective industrial sector, while earnings-replacement rates were raised to correspond to contractual disability rates.[29] In February 1963, improved health benefits for agricultural workers, with the introduction of free pharmaceutical assistance and the flat-rate sickness indemnity replaced by an earnings-related indemnity equal to 50% of minimum contractual pay (in each province) for a maximum of 180 days.[29]

In his three years rule, thanks to the key support of the PSI, Fanfani approved the nationalization of Enel, the national electric company and the establishment of middle school, the introduction of share taxation. Only the implementation of the ordinary statute regions and the urban reform remained uncompleted, due to a strong internal opposition within the DC. Moreover, the new international balance of power marked by the presidency of John F. Kennedy, influenced Western politics in favor of reformism, as the best alternative to defeat communism. During his premiership, Fanfani built up a good relation with President Kennedy. The two leaders met the first time during 1956 Democratic National Convention in Chicago,[58] and in 1963, Fanfani was invited at the White House.[59] Some analysts reported that Kennedy considered Fanfani an example of Catholic reformism.[60] During the Cuban Missile Crisis, according to Ettore Bernabei, it was Fanfani who proposed the withdrawal of medium-range US missiles from Apulia, which than resulted in a peaceful ending of the crisis.[61]

General election in 1963 and resignation

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Amintore Fanfani during a Christian Democracy rally in the late 1960s

Despite a good approval in public opinion, his reformist policy produced a significant mistrust of the Italian industrial class and the right-wing of the Christian Democracy; multinational potentates opposed the opening to the Arab countries led by Fanfani's ally Enrico Mattei, founder of Eni.

In the 1963 general election, the Christian Democrats lost almost one million votes, gaining nearly 38%, while the PCI arrived second with 25%.[62] However the liberals surged to 7%, their best results ever, receiving many votes from former Christian Democratic supporters, who were against Fanfani's centre-left policies. With the decline of electoral support, on 22 June 1963, the majority of DC members decided to replace Fanfani with a provisional government led by impartial President of the Chamber of Deputies, Giovanni Leone;[63] however in autumn, when the congress of the Socialist Party authorized a full engagement of the party into the government, Leone resigned and Aldo Moro, secretary of the DC and leader of the more leftist wing of the party, became the new prime minister and ruled Italy for more than four years.[64]

Minister and president of the Senate

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Fanfani during the 1970s

In August 1964, President Antonio Segni suffered a serious cerebral hemorrhage while he was working at the presidential palace; he only partially recovered and decided to resign. Fanfani tried to be elected president, running against DC's official candidate, Giovanni Leone.[65] However, neither Fanfani nor Leone succeeded in being elected, in fact, during the 1964 presidential election, the social-democratic leader Giuseppe Saragat succeeded in gaining the majority of votes.[66][67] Fanfani's reckless action against Leone caused him even more enmities.

In March 1965, Fanfani was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs, during the second government of Aldo Moro.[68] In December 1965, he was forced to resign after the publication of an unauthorized interview, in which he harshly criticised the government and the United States.[69] However, after only two months, he returned to the office in Moro's third cabinet.[70][71][72] During his ministry, he implemented a strong pro-European politics, advocating a strengthen of the European Economic Community (EEC). Moreover, he was a vocal opponent of US bombing on civilians during the Vietnam War. Fanfani also continued implementing his pro-Arab policies in the Mediterranean Sea, and tried to build a closer relation with China.[73] From 1965 to 1966, he also served as President of the United Nations General Assembly, becoming the only Italian to have held this office.[74][75]

In the 1968 general election, Fanfani ran for the Senate of the Republic, being elected in the constituency of Arezzo, with 41,070 votes.[76] On 5 June 1968, he was elected President of the Senate and remained in office until 26 June 1973.[77]

On 26 September 1968, Fanfani lost his wife, Biancarosa, who died of cerebral venous thrombosis, at only 54-year-old.[78]

 
Fanfani with the United States President Richard Nixon in 1970.

In March 1970, after the fall of Mariano Rumor's second cabinet, President Saragat gave Fanfani the task of forming a new center-left government, but his proposal to bring in the cabinet, all the parties' secretaries was not accepted, because was seen as an excessive way to strengthen the government, in contrast to the particracy which dominated Italian politics. On 27 March 1970, Rumor was sworn in as prime minister again.[79]

In the 1971 presidential election, Fanfani was proposed as Christian Democracy's candidate for the Presidency of the Republic. Once again the move failed, being weakened by the divisions within his own party and the candidacy of the socialist Francesco De Martino, who received votes from PCI, PSI and some PSDI members.[80] Fanfani retired after several unsuccessful ballots and, at the twenty-third round, Giovanni Leone, who was Fanfani's rival in the 1964 election, was finally elected with a centre-right majority.[81] On 10 March 1972, Leone appointed Fanfani Senator for life.[23][82]

Second term as secretary

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In June 1973 Fanfani was elected secretary of the Christian Democracy for a second term, replacing his former protégé Arnaldo Forlani, who was now a supporter of centrist policies. As such, he led the campaign for the referendum on repealing the law allowing divorce, which was approved by the parliament in 1970.[83] Those voting "yes" wanted to outlaw divorce as had been the case before the law came into effect, and those voting "no" wanted to retain the law and their newly gained right to divorce. The voting method caused significant confusion with many people not understanding that they had to vote "no" to be able to divorce or vote "yes" to outlaw divorce.[84]

The DC and the neo-fascist MSI intensely campaigned for a yes vote to abolish the law and make divorce illegal again. Their main themes were the safeguarding of the traditional nuclear family model and the Roman Catechism;[85][86] while most left-wing political forces, including PCI and PSI, supported the "no" faction. Fanfani thought that a "no" victory could have given him the control of in his own party again; in fact other key figures like Moro, Rumor, Emilio Colombo and Francesco Cossiga, who believed in the defeat at the referendum, kept a low profile during the campaign.[87]

Despite Fanfani's activism, the "no" front was defeated by margin of 59.3% to 40.7% on a voter turnout of 87.7%, thus allowing the divorce laws to remain in force.[88] The soundly defeat in the divorce referendum forced his resignation as party secretary in July 1975. The new secretary of the party was Benigno Zaccagnini, a Christian leftist who was initially supported by Fanfani, but after his ideas of starting a cooperation with the Communist Party, Fanfani, Andreotti and Flaminio Piccoli, tried to forced Zaccagnini to resignation, but they failed.[89]

On 3 August 1975, Fanfani married his second wife, Maria Pia Vecchi (née Tavazzani), a widow and strong-willed woman engaged in multiple voluntary activities, nationally and internationally.[90]

On 5 July 1976, Fanfani was elected President of the Senate for a second term, a position that he held until 1 December 1982.[91] In that new political phase he had to significantly reduce his ambitions of holding an active political role, acting like sober and low-profile statesman. Meanwhile, on 30 July 1976, Moro reached an agreement with the Communist leader, Enrico Berlinguer, to start a government composed only by Christian Democrats but with the abstention of the PCI.[92] The cabinet, who was led by Andreotti, was nicknamed "Government of the non-no-confidence".[93]

Kidnapping of Aldo Moro

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Fanfani and Moro during the 1970s

In January 1978, Andreotti's government fell due to the withdrawal of support from the PCI, which wanted to be directly involved in the government, an hypothesis however rejected by the Christian Democracy.[94]

In March 1978, the political crisis was overcome by the intervention of Aldo Moro, who proposed a new cabinet, again formed only by Christian Democratic politicians, but with positive confidence votes from the other parties, including Berlinguer's PCI.[95] This cabinet was formed on 16 March 1978, the day on which Aldo Moro was kidnapped by the left wing terrorist group known as Red Brigades (BR). The dramatic situation which followed brought PCI to vote for Andreotti's cabinet for the sake of what was called "national solidarity", despite its refusal to accept several previous requests.[96][97]

During the kidnapping of his long-time friend but also rival, despite Andreotti and Cossiga's positions, Fanfani did not refuse every possibility of negotiations with the terrorists. Moro was killed by the Red Brigades in May 1978.[98] Fanfani was the only Christian Democratic leader to be allowed by Moro's family to participate to the funeral.[99]

Last terms as prime minister

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Amintore Fanfani with the other G7 leaders in 1983, Virginia, US

In June 1981, Giovanni Spadolini, a member of the Republican Party, was appointed prime minister, becoming the first non-Christian Democrat to hold the office since the foundation of the republic.[100]

In November 1982, Spadolini was forced to resign due to the so-called "godmothers' quarrel", a political conflict between ministers Beniamino Andreatta and Rino Formica about the separation between Ministry of Treasury and Bank of Italy.[101] Fanfani, who was still serving as President of the Senate, received the task from President Sandro Pertini of forming a new government and sworn in on 1 December 1982.[102] The cabinet was composed by members of DC, PSI, PSDI, and PLI.[103] Fanfani resigned on 29 April 1983, when, after months of tense relations in the majority, the central committee of the Socialist Party, meeting on 22 April, decided the withdrew its support to the government, calling for new elections.[104]

 
Amintore Fanfani in 1983

The 1983 general election resulted in a big loss for DC and its new secretary, Ciriaco De Mita. The Christian Democrats in fact lost more than five percentage points from the previous election, while the PSI gained ground.[105] On 4 August 1983, the socialist leader Bettino Craxi succeeded Fanfani at the head of the government.[106] De Mita accused Fanfani for the electoral defeat and did not candidate him as President of the Senate, preferring Francesco Cossiga.[107][108] After this fact, it was even clearer how Fanfani had by then lost much of his political power and control over the party.[109]

In the 1985 presidential election, Cossiga was elected as president with 752 votes out of 977.[110] His candidacy was endorsed by the DC, but supported also by communists, socialists, social democrats, liberals and republicans. This was the first time an Italian presidential candidate had won the election on the first ballot, where a two-thirds majority is necessary.[111] On 9 July 1985, Fanfani was re-elected President of the Senate, for a third term.[112]

In April 1987, De Mita decided to drop his support for Craxi's government.[113] This caused the immediate fall of the cabinet and the formation of a new government led again by Fanfani. Even though he was a close friend of Craxi, the socialist leader did not participate in the swearing in ceremony, sending the Undersecretary to the Presidency of the Council Giuliano Amato, to protest against De Mita's decision.[114] Fanfani's sixth government, composed only of DC ministers with some independent ministers, did not gain the confidence in the Chamber of Deputies, following a surreal vote: it gained the confidence from PSI, PSDI and Radicals, that were excluded from the government, while the Christian Democrats abstained.[115] Fanfani presented his resignation after only 11 days as head of government, causing the early dissolution of the houses.[116] He would remain in office until 29 July 1987, when after a general election, a new government was formed with Giovanni Goria at its head.[117]

After the premiership

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In Goria's cabinet, Fanfani was appointed Minister of the Interior, however the government fell in April 1988, after the PSI withdrew its support in opposition to the reopening of the Montalto di Castro nuclear power plant, decided by the government.[118]

Ciriaco De Mita became the new prime minister and Fanfani held the office of Minister of Budget and Economic Planning.[119][120][121] However, tensions between Christian Democrats and Socialists continued growing and De Mita was forced to resign in July 1989.[122]

In 1992, Fanfani was elected to the prestigious office of chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Senate and held the role until 1994.[123] In January 1994, he supported the dissolution of the Christian Democracy, which had been overwhelmed by Tangentopoli corruption scandal, and the formation of the Italian People's Party (PPI).[124]

Death and legacy

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A portrait of Fanfani as President of the UN General Assembly

Fanfani died in Rome on 20 November 1999, at the age 91.[125]

Fanfani is still a controversial figure in Italian politics. Admirers emphasize his reformist agenda and his ambition to cooperate with socialists, laying the groundwork for the birth of the modern centre-left, of which he is widely considered one of the main founding fathers.[126] Critics condemn his centralized and often authoritarian political style, which was probably the main reason for his decline.[127]

He had always believed in the corporate state, considering Fascism only as a "temporary aberration" of corporatism. He never tried to hide his fascist past, but unlike many Italians, he freely admitted that he was wrong.[14]

Fanfani held all positions and offices that a politician could possibly aspire to, except the one he craved most, the presidency of the Republic. His authoritarian nature and factionalism within the Christian Democracy turned out to be the biggest obstacles to the emergence of "Fanfanism", the Italian version of Gaullism, and one by one he lost all his offices.[23]

In an obituary for La Stampa, journalist Filippo Ceccarelli [it] reflected that Fanfani's commitment to public service inspired the values of the state broadcaster RAI, which matured during his political career.[10]

Electoral history

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Election House Constituency Party Votes Result
1946 Constituent Assembly Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto DC 15,692  Y Elected
1948 Chamber of Deputies Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto DC 35,515  Y Elected
1953 Chamber of Deputies Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto DC 44,816  Y Elected
1958 Chamber of Deputies Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto DC 45,956  Y Elected
1963 Chamber of Deputies Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto DC 58,791  Y Elected
1968 Senate of the Republic Arezzo DC 41,070  Y Elected

References

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  1. ^ "Bassi per Sette".
  2. ^ Gino Moliterno (2002). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Italian Culture. Routledge. p. 302. ISBN 978-1-134-75876-0.
  3. ^ "Amintore Fanfani", Enciclopedia Treccani.
  4. ^ Franzosi, The Puzzle of Strikes, p. 202
  5. ^ "La politica mediterranea dell'Italia. Il governo italiano e la Democrazia Cristiana di fronte al mondo arabo negli anni del centro-sinistra (1963–1972)"
  6. ^ "Il primo governo di centrosinistra: Fanfani 1962"
  7. ^ "Ebbe tutte le cariche, gli sfuggì solo il Quirinale"
  8. ^ "Amintore Fanfani" – Biografia
  9. ^ Gli uomini che fecero la Repubblica
  10. ^ a b Ceccarelli, Filippo (21 November 1999). "Un indomabile cavallo di razza democristiano" [An indomitable horse of the type Christian Democrat]. La Stampa. p. 7. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  11. ^ Mondo democristiano, mondo cattolico nel secondo Novecento italiano
  12. ^ "Lo spirito del welfare", Andrea Bassi
  13. ^ ""Amintore Fanfani" – Biografie". Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d "Italy: Moving to the Left". Time. 14 July 1958. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
  15. ^ (in Italian) Fanfani il "modernizzatore" Archived 18 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Quotidiano della Basilicata, 6 February 2008
  16. ^ Amintore Fanfani – Dizionario Bibliografico Treccani
  17. ^ Amintore Fanfani: quaresime e resurrezioni
  18. ^ L'addio a Fanfani, la Repubblica
  19. ^ "Illness in the Family", Time, 18 January 1954
  20. ^ a b "The Little Professor", Time, 25 January 1954.
  21. ^ Quaderni Svizzeri 1943–1945
  22. ^ Alcide De Gasperi, britannica.com
  23. ^ a b c Obituary Amintore Fanfani, The Guardian, 22 November 1999
  24. ^ «Fondata sul lavoro»: l'articolo 1 e il compromesso alla base della Costituzione italiana, Corriere della Sera
  25. ^ Elezioni del 1948, Collegio di Siena–Arezzo–Grosseto, Ministero dell'Interno
  26. ^ Governo De Gasperi V, governo.it
  27. ^ VII Governo De Gasperi, camera.it
  28. ^ Governo Pella, governo.it
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Growth to Limits: The Western European Welfare States Since World War II Volume 4 edited by Peter Flora
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  31. ^ Cattolico e risorgimentale, Pella e il caso di Trieste
  32. ^ Governo Fanfani I, governo.it
  33. ^ "Roman Circus", Time, 8 February 1954.
  34. ^ I Governo Fanfani, camera.it
  35. ^ Il nuovo ministero Scelba ha prestato giuramento al Quirinale, in "La Nuova Stampa", 11 February 1954, page 1
  36. ^ "Young Initiative", Time, 12 July 1954.
  37. ^ "Out for the Big Win"[permanent dead link], Time, 26 May 1958.
  38. ^ Il neo-atlantismo di Fanfani e Mattei
  39. ^ Fanfani, una leadership spuntata, Il Sole 24 Ore
  40. ^ "Danger on the Left"[permanent dead link], Time, 9 May 1955.
  41. ^ Gli Stati Uniti e Fanfani, Università di Roma
  42. ^ Amintore Fanfani e la crisi del comunismo
  43. ^ Elezioni del 1958, Ministero dell'Interno
  44. ^ Ungheria, la rottura tra PCI e PSI
  45. ^ Governo Fanfani II, senato.it
  46. ^ Amintore Fanfani e la politica estera italiana
  47. ^ Il Fanfani II: un governo breve, ma intenso!
  48. ^ 1958 – 1963, II governo Fanfani
  49. ^ "Italy's Fanfan", Time, 16 June 1961.
  50. ^ Governo Segni I, senato.it
  51. ^ Si sfalda la corrente fanfaniana
  52. ^ VII Congresso – Firenze, Teatro La Pergola
  53. ^ Il governo Tambroni, raiscuola.it
  54. ^ III Legislatura: 12 giugno 1958 – 15 maggio 1963
  55. ^ Governo Fanfani III, governo.it
  56. ^ Il centrosinistra – Storia[permanent dead link], Rai Cultura
  57. ^ "A Sinistra?", Time, 12 January 1962.
  58. ^ Il feeling di JFK con Fanfani. 'Gli piaceva, ma non in modo incredibile'
  59. ^ Fanfani a colloquio con Kennedy alla Casa Bianca
  60. ^ Fanfani a ruota libera: "Kennedy e Roosevelt li ho ispirati io
  61. ^ Giovagnoli – Tosi, 2010, pages 477–480
  62. ^ Elezioni del 1963, Ministero dell'Interno
  63. ^ I Governo Leone, camera.it
  64. ^ I Governo Moro, governo.it
  65. ^ Scrutini per l'elezione di Giuseppe Saragat a presidente della Repubblica, camera.it
  66. ^ L'elezione del Presidente Saragat, quirinale.it
  67. ^ Quirinale: 1964, via crucis per Leone, ce la fa Saragat
  68. ^ Governo Moro II, governo.it
  69. ^ Guarda chi c'è in casa del ministro, la Repubblica
  70. ^ Governo Moro III, governo.it
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  73. ^ La politica araba dell'Italia democristiana
  74. ^ Fanfani: dalla Costituente all'ONU, una vita per la politica
  75. ^ Il politico che divorava il potere, la Repubblica
  76. ^ Elezioni del 1968 – Collegio di Arezzo, Ministero dell'Interno
  77. ^ I Presidenti del Senato dal 1948, senato.it
  78. ^ Una crisi improvvida nella vita di Fanfani, Corriere della Sera
  79. ^ Composizione del Governo Rumor III, senato.it
  80. ^ Corsa al Quirinale: l'elezione di Giovanni Leone, Panorama
  81. ^ L'elezione del Presidente Leone, quirinale.it
  82. ^ Scheda di attività di Amintore Fanfani – V Legislatura, senato.it
  83. ^ Legge n. 898 del 1 dicembre 1970, Gazzetta Ufficiale
  84. ^ Referendum divorzio, 45 anni fa il No all'abrogazione della legge
  85. ^ Divorzio, 40 anni fa la "retorica" di Fanfani per fare abrogare la legge
  86. ^ Il "no" che cambiò l'Italia: la storia del referendum sul divorzio, Corriere della Sera
  87. ^ Amintore Fanfani, Il Post
  88. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1048 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  89. ^ Benigno Zaccagnini nel futuro della politica, Romano Prodi
  90. ^ E' morta a 97 anni Maria Pia Fanfani, la Repubblica
  91. ^ Elezione del Presidente del Senato della Repubblica del 1976, senato.it
  92. ^ 1976: nasce il governo di solidarietà nazionale
  93. ^ Il governo della "non sfiducia", nel 1976, Il Post
  94. ^ Head of Small-Italian Party Is Asked to Form Cabinet, New York Times
  95. ^ Berlinguer, teoria e tecnica del compromesso storico
  96. ^ Discorsi parlamentari di Enrico Berlinguer, Italian Chamber of Deputies, ed. M.L. Righi, 2001, p. 183. (in Italian)
  97. ^ I Presidenti Leone e Pertini di fronte alla Costituzione e alla crisi del Governo Andreotti IV: fra sequestro Moro, apogeo della solidarietà nazionale ed evoluzione del ruolo presidenziale
  98. ^ Moro, Aldo (1978). "Il Memoriale di Aldo Moro" (PDF) (in Italian). Retrieved 17 October 2010.
  99. ^ Aldo Moro: l'ultimo viaggio nel buio, la Repubblica
  100. ^ "Comunicato concernente la formazione del Governo". Gazzetta Ufficiale, n. 184 (in Italian). 7 July 1981. pp. 4318–4319.
  101. ^ ll divorzio tra Tesoro e Bankitalia e la lite delle comari, Il Sole 24 Ore
  102. ^ Governo Fanfani V, governo.it
  103. ^ L'VIII Legislatura al capolinea: il Governo Fanfani V e la crisi dei partiti nei primi anni Ottanta
  104. ^ Il Governo Fanfani si è dimesso
  105. ^ Elezioni del 1983, Ministero dell'Interno
  106. ^ Craxi, storia di un riformista, Il Tempo
  107. ^ La biografia del Presidente Cossiga, quirinal.it
  108. ^ Francesco Cossiga – Dizionario biografico Treccani
  109. ^ La caduta di Fanfani, la Repubblica
  110. ^ L'elezione del Presidente Cossiga, quirinale.it
  111. ^ Quirinale: 1985, ecco il "sardomuto" Cossiga, il picconatore
  112. ^ Biografia di un "cavallo di razza", la Repubblica
  113. ^ Craxi e De Mita, quando la staffetta era guerra
  114. ^ Quando Bettino disertò il passaggio di consegne mandandoci Amato, Il Tempo
  115. ^ Il senso del "governo neutrale" in un sistema istituzionale bloccato, Il Foglio
  116. ^ I Governi privi della fiducia iniziale
  117. ^ Composizione del Governo Goria, senato.it
  118. ^ "Goria, un addio da protagonista". La Repubblica. 12 March 1988. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  119. ^ Governo De Mita, camera.it
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  121. ^ "Misuriamoci sui problemi tutti insieme in Parlamento". La Repubblica. 22 April 1988. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
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  123. ^ Composizione della Commissione permanente Affari esteri ed emigrazione, senato.it
  124. ^ Giuseppe Vottari (2004). Storia d'Italia (1861–2001). Alpha Test. pp. 177–178. ISBN 978-88-483-0562-4.
  125. ^ È morto Fanfani. Fu padre del centrosinistra, la Repubblica
  126. ^ Il centrosinistra
  127. ^ Estendere l'azione contro il regime autoritario di Fanfani.

Further reading

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  • Giulio Andreotti, De Gasperi e il suo tempo, Milan, Mondadori, 1956.
  • Amintore Fanfani, Catholicism, Protestantism, and Capitalism, reprint, Norfolk: IHS Press, 2003.
  • Nico Perrone, Il segno della DC, Bari, Dedalo, 2002, ISBN 88-220-6253-1.
  • Luciano Radi, La Dc da De Gasperi a Fanfani, Soveria Manelli, Rubbettino, 2005.
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Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Labour
1947–1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Agriculture
1951–1953
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Interior
1953–1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1958–1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1958–1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1960–1963
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
Acting

1962
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Aldo Moro
Acting
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1965
Succeeded by
Aldo Moro
Acting
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1966–1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Italian Senate
1968–1973
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Italian Senate
1976–1982
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Italy
Acting

1978
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1982–1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Italian Senate
1985–1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1987
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Interior
1987–1988
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of the Budget
1988–1989
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Secretary of Christian Democracy
1954–1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of Christian Democracy
1973–1975
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by President of the UN General Assembly
1965–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairperson of the G7
1987
Succeeded by