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The Italian statesman Palmiro Togliatti (1893-1964) was one of the principal founders of the Italian Communist Party. Under his leadership the party became the largest Communist Party in the West and a major factor in Italian politics after World War II.
Born in Genoa on March 26, 1893, the son of a modest state employee who was highly religious, Palmiro Togliatti was named "Palmiro" after the Palm Sunday that was his birthday. He attended high school in Sardinia and then studied law at the University of Turin. In 1914 he joined the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). During World War I he did military service until his release in 1917, when he returned to Turin.
As a student Togliatti experienced a wide variety of ideologies and intellectual currents, ranging from Marxism to neo-Hegelianism and syndicalism. His war experiences and the example of the Russian revolution turned him more and more toward Marxism. He took up journalism for the Socialist cause and joined Antonio Gramsci, Angelo Tasca, and Umberto Terracini in founding the Turinese weekly L'Ordine Nuovo. On the newspaper he became known for his biting column on cultural topics. In 1921 he and the Ordine Nuovo group joined Amadeo Bordiga and others in splitting from the Socialists and founding the Italian Communist Party (PCI). A bitter struggle over control of the PCI followed. Bordiga wanted to continue the schism with the Socialists. Others such as Togliatti and Gramsci, supported by the Soviet Union, favored a "united front" with the Socialists. By 1926, at the Congress of Lyons, the Gramsci-Togliatti faction triumphed, and Gramsci assumed leadership of the party.
Togliatti, however, succeeded Gramsci in November 1926 when the latter was arrested and imprisoned by the Fascist regime of Benito Mussolini. Togliatti avoided arrest only because he was in Moscow at the time. In addition to heading the PCI, Togliatti became a major figure in the Third International. In 1937 he became that organization's secretary. His long association with the International during the Stalin years has given Togliatti - somewhat unfairly - the reputation of having been a "Stalinist." Despite personal misgivings, by 1929 Togliatti did bring the PCI into conformity with the International's increasingly hard line. Togliatti, however, disagreed with many of Stalin's ideas and actions. He found the anti-Fascist policies of the Popular Front in France far more congenial. Just as the French Communists had joined the Socialists and left radicals in an anti-Fascist pact, Togliatti led the PCI into forming a similar alliance with the Italian Socialists. In his Lectures on Fascism given at the Leninist School in Moscow and at a major speech before the Seventh Congress of the International (1935), Togliatti presented his case for a popular front policy.
From 1937 to 1939 Togliatti served in Spain as the International's representative to the Spanish Communist Party. He was among the Republic's last defenders until he fled to Algeria in March 1939. During the early months of World War II he was imprisoned in France, where he remained until his release and return to the Soviet Union in May 1940. From June 27, 1941, to May 11, 1943, using the pseudonym of "Mario Correnti, " he delivered more than 100 radio broadcasts to Fascist Italy. In his programs he kept his audience abreast of military developments and urged armed resistance to Fascism.
In July 1943 the Fascist regime fell, and on March 27, 1944, Togliatti was finally able to end his long exile and return to Italy. He directed the Communist Party to collaborate in the formation of the Badoglio government, the successor to Mussolini, and to join the armed struggle against Fascism and the German occupation. For the first time, the PCI emerged as a significant national party (1, 770, 896 members at the end of 1945).
During the next several years Togliatti served as minister without portfolio in several cabinets and ministries (under Badoglio and Ivanoe Bonomi), as vice-president of the Council of Ministers with Bonomi, and as minister of justice with Ferruccio Parri and Alcide De Gasperi. Togliatti's "collaborationist policy" was aimed at defusing the opposition of conservative elements in Italian society. Togliatti's policy failed, however. The Communist-Socialist bloc was defeated in the 1948 elections, and the Communists were isolated. In the same year an attempt on Togliatti's life scandalized the nation, and only his insistence on calm prevented a bloody insurrection.
The Cold War years from 1947 to 1955 were difficult for Togliatti. Although he advocated gradualism, independence for individual Communist parties, and Communist participation in power, the PCI remained isolated. Just before his death he argued that there were many roads to socialism and urged the PCI toward greater independence from the Soviet Union. These policies, summarized by the term "polycentrism, " were adopted by his successors.
In August 1964 Togliatti made a last trip to the U.S.S.R., where he was planning to discuss recent developments in the Socialist camp. Struck by a cerebral hemorrhage, he died at Yalta on August 21, 1964.
Further Reading
Sources on Togliatti in English are scarce, although some of his major writings have been translated: Palmiro Togliatti, Lectures on Fascism (1976), The Spanish Revolution (1936), The Fight for Peace (1935), Inside Italy (1942), and On Gramsci and Other Writings, edited by Donald Sassoon (1979). For Togliatti's role in shaping the Communist Party see Donald Sassoon, The Strategy of the Italian Communist Party (1981).
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Palmiro Togliatti
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| In office June 21, 1945 – July 1, 1946 |
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| Prime Minister | Alcide De Gasperi |
| Preceded by | Umberto Tupini |
| Succeeded by | Fausto Gullo |
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| Born | March 26, 1893 Genoa, Italy |
| Died | August 21, 1964 (aged 71) Yalta, Soviet Union |
| Nationality | Italian |
| Political party | Italian Socialist Party (until c. 1918), Italian Communist Party (c. 1918 - 1964) |
Palmiro Togliatti (March 26, 1893 - August 21, 1964) was an Italian politician, the leader of the Italian Communist Party from 1927 until his death in 1964.
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Born in Genoa to a middle class family, Togliatti began his political life in the Italian Socialist Party prior to the First World War. He served as a volunteer officer during the war, and was wounded in action and sent home for illness. Returning at the end of the conflict, he was a part of the group around Antonio Gramsci's L'Ordine Nuovo paper in Turin, while working as a tutor.
He was a founding member of the Communist Party of Italy (PCd'I, later PCI) and, after Gramsci was jailed by Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime, he became the senior leader of the PCd'I until his death, for which he also directed Il Comunista.
When the party was banned by the Italian Fascist government in 1926, Togliatti was one of few leaders not to be arrested, as he was attending a meeting of the Comintern in Moscow. In exile during the late 1920s and the 1930s, he organized clandestine meetings of the PCd'I at Lyon (1926) and Cologne (1931). In 1927 he took the position of Secretary of the party.
In 1935, under the nom de guerre Ercole Ercoli, he was named member of the secretariat of the Comintern. In Spain in 1937, during the Civil War, he willingly contributed to the elimination of anarchists and Trotskyists by the Catalan Communist leaders (carried out on the orders of Joseph Stalin)[citation needed]. In 1939 he was arrested in France: released, he moved to the Soviet Union and, remained there during World War II, broadcasting radio messages to Italy, in which he called for resistance to Nazi Germany and the Italian Social Republic.
He returned to his native country in 1944 and it was under his direction that the PCI carried out the svolta di Salerno, the "Salerno Turn" — this change in policy was the turn of the party to support of democratic measures of reform in Italy (the birth of the Italian Republic), and the refusal to engage in armed struggle for the cause of Socialism. In effect, the turn moved the party to the right, in contrast with many demands from within; it also meant the disarmament of those members of the Italian resistance movement that had been organized by the PCI. Togliatti briefly served as Justice Minister.
After having been minister without portfolio in the Pietro Badoglio government, he acted as vice-premier under Alcide De Gasperi in 1945. In opposition with the dominant line in his own party, he voted for the including of the Lateran Pacts in the Italian Constitution. At the 1946 general election, the PCI obtained 19% of the votes and 104 seats.
Communist ministers were evicted during the May 1947 crisis. The same month, Maurice Thorez, head of the French Communist Party (PCF), was forced to quit Paul Ramadier's government along with the four others communist ministers. As in Italy, the PCF was very strong, taking part in the Three parties alliance (Tripartisme) and scoring 28.6% at the November 1946 elections.
In 1948, Togliatti led the PCI in the first democratic election after World War II.[1] He lost to the Christian Democrat party (DC – Democrazia Cristiana) after a violent campaign in which the United States, viewing him as a Cold War enemy, played a large part.[2] The CIA, which had just been created, allegedly massively interfered in the elections. Allied with the PSI in the Popular Democratic Front, the left-wing achieved 31% of the votes. Until 1996, the left-wing coalition was unable to prevail in the national political elections, while scoring many successes in local administrative elections. The only tentative to include the PCI in government, under Enrico Berlinguer's leadership, through the historic compromise, ended up with Aldo Moro's 1978 assassination. In 2000, the Olive Tree left-of-center coalition released a report explicitly accusing Washington of having followed a strategy of tension in Italy "to prevent the PCI, and in a lesser measure the PSI, of acceding to power."
On July 14 1948, Togliatti was shot three times, being severely wounded — his life hung in the balance for days and news about his condition was uncertain, causing an acute political crisis in Italy (which included a general strike called by the Italian General Confederation of Labour).[3] Carlo Lucarelli's "Via delle oche," the final book in his De Luca trilogy, contains a vivid fictionalized account of that day.
Under his leadership, the PCI became the second largest party in Italy, and the largest non-ruling communist party in Europe. Although permanently in the opposition at the national level during Togliatti's lifetime, the party ran many municipalities and held great power at the local and regional level in certain areas.
In 1953, he fought against the so-called "cheat or swindle law", an electoral one voted by the Christian Democracy-led majority of the time, which aimed at using first past the post to augment the center-right's power. Ultimately, the law was to prove of no use for the government in the elections of that year, which won Togliatti's PCI 22.6% of the vote; it was repealed in November 1953.
Despite his allegedly tight relationship with Soviet Union, Togliatti's leadership remained unscathed after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution (which was everywhere else a cause for major conflicts within the left). He coined the development of the polycentrism theory (unity in diversity within the communist parties in all countries). In the 1958 elections, the number of Communist votes was still on the rise. In the 1963 elections, the PCI gained 25.2% of the votes, but again failed to reach a relative majority.
Togliatti died as a result of cerebral haemorrhage while vacationing with his companion Nilde Iotti in Yalta, then in the Soviet Union. According to some of his collaborators, Togliatti was travelling to the Soviet Union in order to give his support to Leonid Brezhnev's election as Nikita Khrushchev's successor at the head of Communist Party of the Soviet Union. His favourite pupil, Enrico Berlinguer, was later elected as his successor to the National Secretary of the PCI position, though Berlinguer's time in office saw the rejection of some policies advocated by Togliatti.
The Russian city of Stavropol-on-Volga, where Togliatti had been instrumental in establishing the AutoVAZ (Lada) automobile manufacturing plant in collaboration with Fiat, was renamed Tolyatti in his honor in 1964, after his death.
Togliatti has been heavily criticised by many Italian historians for his crimes. Ever since 1942-1943 Togliatti allowed Joseph Stalin to kill the Italian politicians who lived in Russia, and the prisoners of war, as proved by the secret papers of the archives of Moscow and by his same letters, addressed to Vincenzo Bianco. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]. Another reason is that Togliatti supported Tito's crimes and invasion of Italy, and didn't condemn the Soviet suppression of the democratic uprising in Hungary. His politics have been defined as Machiavellian and cynical in purpose, aimed mainly at securing the growth of the PCI (and that of Communism in general).
He has been also criticized for his alternate relations with the maverick Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito, which were considered to be closely following the party line dictated from the Kremlin.
The same has been said of Togliatti's judgement of Stalin's policies: after the communist leader's death in 1953, he had stated that "Joseph Stalin is a titan of thought and action. His name is to be given to an entire century...". Later on, in 1956, after the de-Stalinization process, he had declared that: "Stalin has disseminated false and exaggerated theses, and was victim of an almost desperate perspective of endless persecution".[citation needed] In the following year, Togliatti repeatedly stated that he had been unaware of Stalin's crimes. The "Italian road to Socialism" he propounded from that moment moved the Italian Communist Party to more democratic and independent positions, which would lead to events such as the PCI's condemnation of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in a famous speech given by Enrico Berlinguer in Moscow.
Despite such contradictions, Togliatti is considered by some politicians as one among the creators of Republican Italy and of its Constitution.
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Umberto Tupini |
Italian Minister of Justice 1945–1946 |
Succeeded by Fausto Gullo |
| Assembly seats | ||
| Preceded by Title jointly held |
Constituent Assembly of Italy 1946 - 1948 |
Succeeded by Title jointly held |
| Preceded by Title jointly held |
Member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies Legislatures I, II, III, IV 1948 - 1964 |
Succeeded by Title jointly held |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by Antonio Gramsci |
Secretary of the Italian Communist Party 1927–1964 |
Succeeded by Luigi Longo |
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