Ivanoe Bonomi
Ivanoe Bonomi | |||||||||||||||||||
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President of the Senate | |||||||||||||||||||
In office 8 May 1948 – 20 April 1951 | |||||||||||||||||||
Preceded by | Pietro Tomasi Della Torretta | ||||||||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Enrico De Nicola | ||||||||||||||||||
Prime Minister of Italy | |||||||||||||||||||
In office 18 June 1944 – 21 June 1945 | |||||||||||||||||||
Monarch | Victor Emmanuel III | ||||||||||||||||||
Lieutenant General | The Prince of Piedmont | ||||||||||||||||||
Deputy | Palmiro Togliatti Giulio Rodinò | ||||||||||||||||||
Preceded by | Pietro Badoglio | ||||||||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Ferruccio Parri | ||||||||||||||||||
In office 4 July 1921 – 26 February 1922 | |||||||||||||||||||
Monarch | Victor Emmanuel III | ||||||||||||||||||
Preceded by | Giovanni Giolitti | ||||||||||||||||||
Succeeded by | Luigi Facta | ||||||||||||||||||
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Personal details | |||||||||||||||||||
Born | Mantua, Kingdom of Italy | 18 October 1873||||||||||||||||||
Died | 20 April 1951 Rome, Italy | (aged 77)||||||||||||||||||
Political party | PSI (1893–1912) PSRI (1912–1922) PDL (1943–1948) PSDI (1948–1951) | ||||||||||||||||||
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2022) |
Ivanoe Bonomi (Italian pronunciation: [iˈvaːnoe boˈnɔːmi];[2] 18 October 1873 – 20 April 1951) was an Italian politician and journalist who served as Prime Minister of Italy from 1921 to 1922 and again from 1944 to 1945.
Background and earlier career
Ivanoe Bonomi was born in Mantua, Italy, in a bourgeois family. He studied natural sciences at the University of Bologna and graduated in 1896. After working for two years as a high school teacher he also completed a law degree in the same university.
In 1893, influenced by the burgeoning cooperative movement, the spread of Marxist propaganda in the Mantuan countryside, and meetings with socialist leaders like Filippo Turati, Leonida Bissolati, and Anna Kuliscioff, he joined the Italian Socialist Party (at the time called Italian Socialist Workers' Party). In August 1894 he attended the Socialist congress for the Lombardy region, which was held in semi-clandestine fashion due to the repressive measures taken by Prime Minister Francesco Crispi. In November he was sentenced to 75 days of internal exile for his political activities.
From the beginning he held reformist views and advocated for revisionist positions, including an alliance between the proletariat and the petite bourgeoisie in defense of democratic institutions. In 1896 he proposed that the Party should endorse liberal, bourgeois candidates in run-off elections, and claimed that the main task of the working class was the transformation of Italy into a modern bourgeois democracy before socialism could be established. In spite of early calls for full land collectivization eventually he moved towards more moderate solutions, like the voluntary creation of cooperatives, in agriculture as well. He was critical of the decision to call the general strike of September 1904, but nonetheless collaborated with revolutionary syndicalists for the duration of the strike.
Internationally he supported other reformists like Eduard Bernstein, Alexandre Millerand, and Jean Jaurès.
In 1907 he was elected to the
Those who had been expelled founded the Italian Reformist Socialist Party (PSRI), which won 3.92% of the vote and 19 seats in the 1913 elections.
The PSRI supported
Crisis of the Italian democracy and first term as prime minister
A few months later, he became Prime Minister of Italy for the first time, in a coalition government, and was the first socialist to hold the post. Early in 1922, his government collapsed, and he was replaced as prime minister by Luigi Facta, amidst the Fascist insurgency led by Benito Mussolini.
During the Fascist period
With the consolidation of the
Towards the end of 1942, as Italy was facing military setbacks on many fronts in World War II and growing political dissent at home, he reprised clandestine contacts with anti-fascists from various political parties. He also began the publication of the underground newspaper la Ricostruzione.
On 2 June 1943 he had a private audience with King
Fall of Fascism and second term as prime minister
After the fall of Fascism in July 1943, Bonomi attended a number of anti-fascist meetings which asked the new government led by Badoglio to disband Fascist organizations, release political prisoners, and restore the free press.
On 9 September, the day after the armistice of Cassibile was announced, six anti-fascist parties agreed to form a National Liberation Committee (CLN), chaired by Bonomi, to lead the Italian resistance movement. The member parties were the Italian Communist Party, the Italian Socialist Party, the Action Party, the Christian Democracy, the Italian Liberal Party, and Bonomi's own Labour Democratic Party. While Rome was under German control Bonomi hid in the area of the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran, under the protection of Pope Pius XII.
As president of the CLN Bonomi sought to steer discussion away from suggestions that the monarchy should be deposed or that the King should abdicate. Relations with the royal government, which had taken refuge in the Allied-controlled South, were a major point of friction. Communists, Socialists and Actionists saw Victor Emmanuel III as complicit with Fascism and responsible for the disastrous wartime situation due to his attitude during both Mussolini's rise and the nearly twenty years of dictatorship, and demanded his immediate departure. Christian Democrats and Liberals preferred to delay any discussion on the form of government to the end of the war, seeing the monarchy as a factor of legitimacy and national unity. Bonomi was also particularly concerned with suppressing any revolutionary aspirations on part of the leftist parties and pursuing the restoration of pre-Fascist liberal democracy. These discussions eventually led him to resign from his post on 24 March 1944. He would return as soon as May 5, after Communist Party secretary Palmiro Togliatti, who had just returned from exile, unexpectedly endorsed the moderate position.[3] Around the same time Enrico De Nicola also brokered a compromise solution where Victor Emmanuel would delegate his powers to the more palatable Prince Umberto, which the King accepted reluctantly.[4]
On June 8, two days after the
The main issues facing the new government were the prosecution of the war until the liberation of Italy from German occupation, as well as the practical implementation of various compromises that had been previously agreed on in principle. As Prime Minister, Bonomi formally recognized the partisan forces operating in the North as part of the war effort, and organized them under a unified command led by Army general Raffaele Cadorna Jr., who was parachuted in the occupied areas. He also approved a decree which provided for the election of a Constituent Assembly after the end of the conflict. Continuing disputes on royal prerogatives and on the extent of purges of Fascist sympathisers within the state bureaucracy, however, led him to resign on November 25. The ensuing government crisis, which saw both Carlo Sforza (who was vetoed by the British over his republican sympathies)[7] and Meuccio Reuini being considered as potential Prime Ministers, was solved with the re-appointment of Bonomi, who offered the position of deputy prime minister to the Christian Democracy and the Communist Party. The Socialist and Action parties chose not to take part in the new cabinet.
In the last months of war he recognized the authority of the CLNAI (a subsidiary organ of the CLN operating in Northern Italy) in case of a general insurrection, and approved decrees concerning the establishment of a provisional legislative body and the organization of a future referendum on the form of government and general elections for the Constituent Assembly.[3] He also passed reforms in social security, increasing payments to people with lower pensions.[8]
With the end of the war in Europe Bonomi started facing more frequent criticism over his personality and actions in the pre-Fascist era, particularly from politicians who had been living underground in the occupied areas and were close to the partisan movement. Therefore, he resigned on 21 June 1945.
After his successor Ferruccio Parri resigned in December 1945 Liberals tried to propose Bonomi as prime minister, and then again the following year as a Minister in Alcide De Gasperi's cabinet, but unsuccessfully.[3]
Later life
In June 1946 he was elected to the Constituent Assembly in the list of the National Democratic Union, an alliance between the Liberal Party and the Labour Democratic Party. He chaired the Assembly's Treaties Committee.[9] He also attended the preliminary conference for the adoption of the peace treaty with the Allies, in Paris, as a member of the Italian delegation.[10]
In 1948 he became a member by right[11] of the Italian Senate. He was elected as its president, the first after the establishment of the Republic, and served in that position until his death. He joined the newly-established Italian Socialist Workers' Party (later known as the Italian Democratic Socialist Party), where he held the honorary position of president.
He died on 20 April 1951 in Palazzo Giustiniani, Rome, the official residence of the President of the Senate, aged 77.
Notes
- ^ As a member of the Constituent Assembly of Italy, he was automatically nominated senator.
- ^ Correct Italian pronunciations of the name Ivanoe are available in the (in Italian) Dizionario d'ortografia e di pronunzia Archived 1 December 2020 at the Wayback Machine online.
- ^ a b c d e Cortesi, Luigi (1971). "BONOMI, Ivanoe in "Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani"". Treccani (in Italian). Retrieved 4 November 2022.
- . Retrieved 4 November 2022.
- ^ Mack Smith, Denis (1989). Italy and Its Monarchy. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 330–331.
- ^ Buchanan, Andrew (2014). American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 155.
- ^ Di Nolfo, Ennio (2006). "Carlo Sforza, diplomatico e oratore". Carlo Sforza, Discorsi parlamentari (in Italian). Rome. p. 46.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Peter Flora (ed) Growth to Limits: The Western European Welfare States Since World War II, Volume 4
- ^ "Ivanoe Bonomi". storia.camera.it (in Italian). Retrieved 4 November 2022.
- ^ "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1946, Paris Peace Conference: Proceedings, Volume III - List of persons". Office of the Historian. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
- ^ According to the 3rd transitory and final provision of the new Constitution deputies of the Constituent Assembly who met certain criteria were eligible to be appointed Senators during its first term.