Jump to content

Adone Zoli

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ira Leviton (talk | contribs) at 14:41, 11 June 2020 (Fixed a typo found with Wikipedia:Typo Team/moss.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Adone Zoli
35th Prime Minister of Italy
In office
19 May 1957 – 1 July 1958
PresidentGiovanni Gronchi
DeputyGiuseppe Pella
Preceded byAntonio Segni
Succeeded byAmintore Fanfani
Minister of Budget
In office
15 February 1956 – 1 July 1958
Prime MinisterAntonio Segni
Himself
Preceded byEzio Vanoni
Succeeded byGiuseppe Medici
Minister of Finance
In office
18 January 1954 – 10 February 1954
Prime MinisterAmintore Fanfani
Preceded byEzio Vanoni
Succeeded byRoberto Tremelloni
Minister of Grace and Justice
In office
26 July 1951 – 16 July 1953
Prime MinisterAlcide De Gasperi
Preceded byAttilio Piccioni
Succeeded byGuido Gonella
Member of the Senate of the Republic
In office
18 April 1948 – 20 February 1960
ConstituencyFlorence
Personal details
Born(1887-12-16)16 December 1887
Cesena, Emilia-Romagna,
Kingdom of Italy
Died20 February 1960(1960-02-20) (aged 72)
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Political partyItalian People's Party (1919–26)
Christian Democracy (1943–60)
SpouseLucia Zoli
Children3
Alma materUniversity of Bologna

Adone Zoli (16 December 1887 – 20 February 1960) was an Italian politician who served as the 35th Prime Minister of Italy from May 1957 to July 1958; he was the first senator to have ever hold the office.[1][2]

A member of the Christian Democracy, Zoli served also as Minister of Grace and Justice, Finance and Budget, during the 1950s.[3]

Early life

Adone Zoli was born in Cesena, Emilia-Romagna, in 1887. He grew up in a wealthy and Catholic observant family.[4] In 1907, he graduated in law at the University of Bologna, starting a career as a lawyer firstly in Genoa, then in Bologna and finally in Florence, where he met Tommaso Brunelli, a Catholic lawyer, elected deputy from Italian People's Party (PPI) in 1919, who greatly influenced Zoli's political ideology.[5]

During these years he married Lucia Zoli, his cousin, from whom he had three children.[6]

Adone Zoli fought in the World War I as a volunteer, taking party in the battle of Caporetto and obtained, at the end of the conflict, two crosses for war merit and one for military honor.[7] After the war he participated in various congresses of the PPI founded by Don Luigi Sturzo. In 1920, he became a member of party's national council, while in October 1921 he was appointed in the national direction, a position that he held until the dissolution of the party in 1926, imposed by the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini. For all his political career, Zoli remained strong anti-fascist.[8]

Resistance movement

In 1943, he joined the partisan resistance by setting up the anti-fascist committee in Florence and later joining the National Liberation Committee (CLN), a political umbrella organization and the main representative of the resistance movement fighting against the German occupation of Italy in the aftermath of the armistice of Cassibile.[9]

In November 1943 he was arrested with two of his children and sentenced to death by the Nazis, but it was freed by his partisan comrades. In February 1944, he underwent a new arresting attempt, this time failed, but his wife and three children were arrested instead.[10]

In December 1943, he was among the founders of the Christian Democracy, the new centrist party, heir of the PPI, led by Alcide De Gasperi.[11] After the liberation from the Nazis, Zoli served deputy mayor of Florence in the municipal government chaired by Gaetano Pieraccini.[12]

Political career

On 25 September 1945, Zoli was appointed in the National Council,[13] an unelected provisional legislative assembly set up in the Kingdom of Italy after the end of World War II.[14] He remained in office until 1 June 1946, when new election were held, in which Zoli decided not to run.[15]

After the 1948 general election, Zoli was elected in the Senate of the Republic for the constituency of Florence, with nearly 70,000 votes.[16]

Minister of Justice

Adone Zoli in 1948

As a close ally of De Gasperi, in July 1951 he was appointed Minister of Grace and Justice in De Gasperi's seventh government.[17]

During his ministry he worked to improve conditions of prisoners, which were still subjected to fascist laws and regulations, in accordance with the principle of the re-educational function of the penalty, expressed by the new republican Constitution.[18] Zoli implemented important measures that included the abolition of the head shaving for prisoners sentenced to short penalties and the exemption from the obligation to wear prison clothes for prisoners. He also established that the condemned should be called by prison officers by name and no longer by matriculation number.[19] He also increased the courses of education, cinematographic and theatrical performances, and allowed to keep in the cell the necessary to write, as well as the photographs of their families.[20]

In addition, Zoli supported the plan, started by communist leader, Palmiro Togliatti, to grant amnesty for crimes committed "for political ends" from the march on Rome to 18 June 1946. This law, approved by parliament in 1953, increased Zoli's popularity.[21][22]

The 1953 general election was characterised by changes in the electoral law. Even if the general structure remained uncorrupted, the government introduced a superbonus of two thirds of seats in the House for the coalition which would obtain at-large the absolute majority of votes. The change was strongly opposed by the opposition parties as well as DC's smaller coalition partners, who had no realistic chance of success under this system. The new law was called the Scam Law by its detractors,[23] including some dissidents of minor government parties who founded special opposition groups to deny the artificial landslide to Christian Democracy.

The campaign of the opposition to the "Scam Law" achieved its goal. The government coalition won 49.9% of national vote, just a few thousand votes of the threshold for a supermajority, resulting in an ordinary proportional distribution of the seats. Technically, the government won the election, winning a clear working majority of seats in both houses. But frustration with the failure to win a supermajority caused significant tensions in the leading coalition. De Gasperi was forced to resign by the Parliament on 2 August.[24] On 17 August, President Einaudi appointed Giuseppe Pella as new Prime Minister and Zoli was not confirmed at the Ministry of Justice.[25]

Minister of Finance

Zoli with Giovanni Leone in 1957

On 12 January 1954, after only 5 months in power, Prime Minister 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.[26][27] President Luigi Einaudi appointed Amintore Fanfani as new head of the government.[28] Fanfani formed a one-party government composed only by members of the Christian Democracy and Zoli was appointed Minister of Finance[29][30]

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, Mario Scelba sworn in as new Prime Minister.[31] 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.[32]

Minister of Budget

In April 1955, Giovanni Gronchi was elected new President of the Republic.[33] After the election, a political crisis between Prime Minister Scelba and DC's leader Fanfani broke out. In July 1955, Scelba resigned from the office, and Segni received the task of forming a new cabinet.[34] Zoli was appointed Minister of Budget.[35]

In May 1957, the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI) withdrew its support to the government and on 6 May, Segni resigned.[36]

Prime Minister of Italy

Adone Zoli in the 1950s

President Gronchi gave Zoli the task of forming a new cabinet, and on 20 May, Zoli sworn in as new head of government.[37] He formed a one-party cabinet, composed only my members of the Christian Democracy, in which he kept the ad interim Ministry of Budget.[38]

On 4 June 1957, the government obtained the confidence vote in the Senate, with 132 votes in favor and 93 against, and on 7 June in the Chamber of Deputies, with 560 votes in favor, 305 against and 11 abstensions.[39] The government externally supported by the Italian Liberal Party (PLI), the Italian Republican Party (PRI), the PSDI, the monarchist parties and also by the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI); it was the first time in republican history, that the MSI supported a government.[40] The support of the neo-fascists raised many criticisms and Zoli then simply declared that MSI votes were not necessary for the majority.[41] The next day, however, he realized that the count was wrong and that the MSI's support had actually been decisive. Then Zoli, a staunch anti-fascist, resigned on the following 10 June, but he was invited by President Gronchi to withdraw his resignation and to remain in power until the natural dissolution of the Italian Parliament in 1958.[42]

During his premiership, the Parliament approved a law in October 1957 that extended compulsory social security insurance to small farmers, sharecroppers and tenant farmers, while a law of 13 March 1958 extended pension insurance to fishermen.[43] Zoli also approved the request of the MSI to bury the body of Benito Mussolini in Predappio, his hometown; a request that was also supported by Pietro Nenni, leader of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), who was a personal friend of Mussolini during the 1910s. The Duce's body was buried in Predappio on 30 August 1957.[44]

In the 1958 general election, the Christian Democracy gained 42.4% of votes, nearly doubling Palmiro Togliatti's Communist Party, which arrived second. However, the poor results of the other small centrist and secular parties kept the same problems of political instability within the centrist coalition, which characterised the previous legislature.[45] As he promised few months before, Zoli resigned after the new general election and, on 1 July 1958, Amintore Fanfani sworn in as new Prime Minister at the head of a coalition government with the PSDI, and a case-by-case support of the PRI.[46]

Death and legacy

Adone Zoli died in Rome on 20 February 1960, at the age of 72. He was buried in the family grave in the cemetery of San Cassiano in Predappio, a few meters from the crypt of Mussolini.[47]

In 1963, the President of the Republic Giuseppe Saragat recognized, with a presidential decree, the "Adone Zoli Center for Economic and Social Policy", an institute founded in memory of the former Prime Minister.[48]

Electoral history

Election House Constituency Party Votes Result
1948 Senate of the Republic Florence bgcolor="Template:Christian Democracy (Italy)/meta/color" | DC 68,525 checkY Elected
1953 Senate of the Republic Florence bgcolor="Template:Christian Democracy (Italy)/meta/color" | DC 57,157 checkY Elected
1958 Senate of the Republic Florence bgcolor="Template:Christian Democracy (Italy)/meta/color" | DC 53,531 checkY Elected

References

  1. ^ Composizione del Governo Zoli, senato.it
  2. ^ Adone Zoli – Biografia
  3. ^ Adone Zoli. Un padre della Repubblica
  4. ^ Gabriella Tronconi Medri, Adone Zoli, Personaggi della vita pubblica di Forlì e circondario, Urbino, Edizioni Quattroventi, 1996
  5. ^ Pierandrea Vanni, Adone Zoli, in I Grandi di Romagna, Bologna, Edizioni Il Resto del Carlino, 1990
  6. ^ Adone Zoli in mostra al Senato
  7. ^ Guido Gambetta and Salvatore Mirabella, Adone Zoli. Un padre della Repubblica, Bologna, Bononia University Press, 2010
  8. ^ Giulio Conticelli, Adone Zoli. Cristiano, patriota, avvocato, Florence, Polistampa, 2014
  9. ^ Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale – CLN
  10. ^ Donne e Uomini della Resistenza: Adone Zoli, ANPI
  11. ^ Einaudi, Mario (1947). "Christian Democracy in Italy". The Review of Politics. 9 (1): 16–33. doi:10.1017/S003467050003792X. JSTOR 1404299.
  12. ^ Alberto Mazzuca, Penne al vetriolo. I grandi giornalisti raccontano la Prima Repubblica, Argelato, Minerva Edizioni, 2017
  13. ^ Adone Zoli – Senato della Repubblica, senato.it
  14. ^ Consulta Nazionale – Portale Storico, camera.it
  15. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1047 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  16. ^ Elezioni del 1948: Collegio di Firenze, Ministero dell'Interno
  17. ^ Governo De Gasperi VII, governo.it
  18. ^ funzione rieducativa della pena, Altalex
  19. ^ La dignità della persona in carcere, giustizia.it
  20. ^ I diritti del detenuto previsti dall'ordinamento italiano: analisi e limiti alla luce delle recenti riforme, Mondo Diritto
  21. ^ Armellini, Arvise (5 April 2016). "New Study: Number of Casualties in Nazi Massacres in Italy Nearly Double as Previously Believed". Haaretz. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  22. ^ Neitzel, Sönke. "Book Review by Sönke Neitzel in War in History: Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Partisanenkrieg: Italien 1943-1945". University of Cologne. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  23. ^ Also its parliamentarian exam had a disruptive effect: "Among the iron pots of political forces that faced in the Cold War, Senate cracked as earthenware pot": Buonomo, Giampiero (2014). "Come il Senato si scoprì vaso di coccio". L'Ago e Il Filo.  – via Questia (subscription required)
  24. ^ (in Italian) Come il Senato si scoprì vaso di coccio, in L’Ago e il filo, 2014.
  25. ^ Mattarella cita Einaudi e l'incarico a Pella: fu il primo governo del presidente
  26. ^ Governo Pella, Governo.it
  27. ^ Cattolico e risorgimentale, Pella e il caso di Trieste
  28. ^ Governo Fanfani I, governo.it
  29. ^ Roman Circus, Time Magazine, 8 February 1954
  30. ^ I Governo Fanfani, camera.it
  31. ^ Il nuovo ministero Scelba ha prestato giuramento al Quirinale, in "La Nuova Stampa", 11 February 1954, page 1
  32. ^ Young Initiative, Time Magazine, 12 July 1954
  33. ^ Danger on the Left[permanent dead link], Time Magazine, May 9, 1955
  34. ^ Governo Segni I, governo.it
  35. ^ Il governo Segni I
  36. ^ I Governo Segni, camera.it
  37. ^ Governo Zoli, camera.it
  38. ^ Composizione del Governo Zoli, senato.it
  39. ^ II Legislature: 25 June 1953 – 11 June 1958
  40. ^ Governo del presidente, che cos’è. I precedenti di Pella, Zoli, Ciampi e Monti, Corriere della Sera
  41. ^ Zoli Adone, galielumautografi.com
  42. ^ Giovanni Di Capua, Mario Martinelli nel secolo delle contraddizioni, Rubbettino Editore, 2004, page 176
  43. ^ Growth to Limits: The Western European Welfare States Since World War II Volume 4 edited by Peter Flora
  44. ^ Alberto Mazzuca and Luciano Foglietta, Mussolini e Nenni amici nemici, Argelato, Minerva Edizioni, 2015
  45. ^ Elezioni del 1958, Ministero dell'Interno
  46. ^ Governo Fanfani II, senato.it
  47. ^ Adone Zoli, Enciclopedia Treccani
  48. ^ Fondazione Zoli
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Justice
1951–1953
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Finance
1954
Succeeded by
Minister of Budget
1956–1958
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Italy
1957–1958
Succeeded by