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Giorgio Almirante

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Giorgio Almirante
President of the Italian Social Movement
In office
January 24, 1988 – May 22, 1988
Preceded byNino Tripodi
Succeeded byAlfredo Pazzaglia
Secretary of the Italian Social Movement
In office
June 29, 1969 – December 13, 1987
Preceded byArturo Michelini
Succeeded byGianfranco Fini
In office
June 15, 1947 – January 15, 1950
Preceded byGiacinto Trevisonno
Succeeded byAugusto De Marsanich
Member of the European Parliament
for Southern Italy
In office
July 17, 1979 – May 22, 1988
Member of Chamber of Deputies
for Rome
In office
May 8, 1948 – May 22, 1988
Personal details
Born(1914-06-27)June 27, 1914
Salsomaggiore Terme, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
DiedMay 22, 1988(1988-05-22) (aged 73)
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Political partyNational Fascist Party
(1930s–1943)
Republican Fascist Party
(1943–1945)
Italian Social Movement
(1946–1988)
Spouse(s)Gabriella Magnatti (1930s–1969; divorced)
Assunta Almirante (1969–1988; his death)
ChildrenGiuliana De' Medici
Rita Almirante
Parent(s)Mario Almirante[1]
Rita Armaroli
OccupationJournalist, politician
Military service
Allegiance Italian Social Republic (1943–1945)
Branch/service National Republican Guard
Years of service1943–1945
RankCapomanipolo
Battles/warsWorld War II

Giorgio Almirante (27 June 1914 – 22 May 1988) was an Italian politician, the founder and leader of the Italian Social Movement until his retirement in 1987.

Early life

Almirante was born at Salsomaggiore Terme, in Emilia Romagna, but their parents were Molisian with noble ancestry. He spent his childhood following his parents, who worked in the theatre, in Turin and Rome. Here he studied under Giovanni Gentile, the then pre-eminent pro-fascist philosopher.[citation needed] He graduated in Literature in 1937.

Pre War Fascism

Almirante trained as a schoolteacher, but went to work writing for the Rome-based fascist journal Il Tevere.[2] A minor figure in the National Fascist Party, whose chief claim to fame was a venomous polemic with Julius Evola on how fascism was to be implemented (he maintained the materialistic view or "biological" view, while his opponent preferred a more "spiritual" take on the matter).[citation needed] In this respect he was influenced by the journalist Telesio Interlandi, who was his ideological mentor.[3] A journalist by profession, Almirante wrote extensively for Interlandi's journal La difesa della razza.[1] Almirante also helped to organise the Italian Social Republic (RSI), being appointed Chief of Cabinet of the Minister of Culture in 1944.[4] A second-tier figure at best, even in the last throes of the Italian fascist regime, Almirante was mentioned in the memoirs of an RSI veteran as "eating and talking all the way through an official dinner speaking in grandiose and cryptic terms of secret weapons and smiling to himself as he did know secrets beyond his guests' comprehension".[citation needed]

Italian Social Movement

Leadership

Following the defeat of fascism Almirante was indicted on charges that he ordered the shooting of partisans in 1944, although a general amnesty saw this lifted.[5] He fled Italy after the war but returned in 1946 to set up his own small fascist group. It was quickly absorbed into the Italian Social Movement (MSI), which was set up the same year.[1] Almirante was chosen as leader of the new party in part because of his low profile, as the higher-ranking members of the fascist regime involved in the MSI opted instead to take on behind the scenes roles.[6] Representing a radical faction within the party, Almirante's group lost ground as more moderate elements gained influence in the party; this tendency soon gained the upper hand, forcing Almirante to give way to Augusto De Marsanich as leader in 1950.[7] He had intimated his support for the Europe a nation ideas prevalent at the time but failed to convince the party to take a position against De Marsanich's pro-NATO policy.[8]

Opposition

During the mid-1950s Almirante, disquieted by the drift towards conservatism under De Marsanich and his successor Arturo Michelini, resigned his position on the National Council to become a critic of the leadership. He emphasised the proletarian origins of fascism against the new conservatism and argued for 'quality' rather than 'quantity' in government, endorsing expert-driven elites instead of liberal democracy. However, he stopped short of the route taken by the other leading dissident Pino Rauti by remaining within the party.[8] Like Rauti, however, he became increasingly influenced in his thought by Evola, even hailing the philosopher as "our Marcuse - only better".[9]

In his role as leader of the internal opposition Almirante was not averse to employing the tactics of the Blackshirts, and indeed in 1968 he was one of three leaders of a 'punitive expedition' against student radicals at the Fine Arts Department at the University of Rome. However, Almirante and some 200 followers were routed and in the end had to be protected by the police.[10]

Return to the leadership

Almirante regained the leadership of the party in 1969 following the death of Michelini. By now his own opinions had shifted somewhat towards a more moderate position as he soon declared his own support for democracy. On this basis he aimed to attract more conservative elements to the MSI, while simultaneously passing reforms that strengthened the power of the party secretary in order to pre-empt opposition from the radical tendency with which he had been associated.[11] He also sought to 'historicise' fascism and dropped the more overt references to the ideology from MSI propaganda and rhetoric, notably shelving the black shirt and the Roman salute.[12]

His new policy, known as the strategia del doppio binario, was not aimed at making the MSI more palatable to the Christian Democrats, as had been the plan of his predecessor, but rather to move the MSI into that party's ideological space and so challenge them directly for the leadership of the right.[13] Almirante felt that by placing anti-communism at the heart of the MSI's appeal the party could attract both its existing followers and more moderate conservatives and could in time rival Christian Democrats as the main party of the right.[14] As part of this policy he brought in a number of disparate rightist groups, merging the MSI with the Italian Democratic Party of Monarchist Unity, readmitting the hard-line splinter group Ordine Nuovo, and adding establishment figures such as Admiral Gino Birindelli and General Giovanni de Lorenzo as members.[15] However, the policy floundered as the MSI made few inroads into Christian Democrat support and instead pushed the mainstream right towards an accommodation with the Italian Communist Party. As a consequence some of the moderate faction split off to form the National Democracy in 1977.[16]

Despite the policy's failure to deliver at the ballot box, under Almirante's leadership the MSI did emerge to an extent from the political ghetto, a shift demonstrated in 1984 when Almirante was allowed to enter the headquarters of the Communist Party in order to pay respects to their dead leader Enrico Berlinguer, a gesture that had been unimaginable for an MSI leader.[17] However, his newly moderate approach brought him into conflict with Rauti and clashes between the two became a feature of the annual party conference.[18]

Almirante also served the MSI in parliament although he was stripped of parliamentary immunity three times: in 1979, he was charged with trying to revive the Fascist Party; and in 1981 and also in 1984, he was charged with aiding and abetting Carlo Cicuttini, who had fled Italy after a 1972 Peteano car bomb that killed three policemen. However, Almirante received amnesty under a 1987 law.[19][20]

Retirement

Dogged by poor health, Almirante stepped down as leader at the 1987 National Congress and saw the leadership pass to his protégé Gianfranco Fini.[21] Fini had been close to Almirante since 1977 when the MSI leader had Fini appointed chief of the MSI youth movement even though he had only finished seventh in the members vote.[22] Fini largely followed in Almirante's footsteps of attempting to shift Italy from a parliamentary to a fully presidential system.[23] Almirante died in Rome on 22 May 1988.

References

  1. ^ a b c Roger Eatwell, Fascism - A History, 2003, p. 249
  2. ^ Franco Ferraresi, Threats to Democracy - The Radical Right in Italy After the War, 1996, p. 209
  3. ^ Philip Rees, Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890, 1990, p. 194
  4. ^ Cheles, Ferguson, and Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, pp. 43-4
  5. ^ Ferraresi, Threats to Democracy, p. 210
  6. ^ Piero Ignazi, Extreme Right Parties in Western Europe, 2006, p. 36
  7. ^ Ignazi, Extreme Right Parties in Western Europe, p. 37
  8. ^ a b Eatwell, Fascism, p. 251
  9. ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, Black Sun, 2003, p. 67
  10. ^ Ferraresi, Threats to Democracy, p. 66
  11. ^ Ignazi, Extreme Right Parties in Western Europe, pp. 38-9
  12. ^ Cheles, Ferguson, and Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, p. 44
  13. ^ Luciano Cheles, Ronnie Ferguson, and Michalina Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, 1991, pp. 34-5
  14. ^ Paul Hainsworth, The Extreme Right in Europe and the USA, Pinter, 1992, p. 157
  15. ^ Cheles, Ferguson, and Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, p. 35
  16. ^ Cheles, Ferguson, and Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, p. 36
  17. ^ Ignazi, Extreme Right Parties in Western Europe, p. 41
  18. ^ Ferraresi, Threats to Democracy, p. 196
  19. ^ "Italian Neo-Fascist Leader Loses Parliamentary Immunity". Associated Press. 1984-01-18.
  20. ^ "Giorgio Almirante, Italian Neo-Fascist, Dies at 73". The New York Times. 1988-05-23.
  21. ^ Ignazi, Extreme Right Parties in Western Europe, p. 42
  22. ^ Ferraresi, Threats to Democracy, p. 211
  23. ^ Hainsworth, The Extreme Right, p. 158


Party political offices
New political party Secretary of the Italian Social Movement
1946–1950
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of the Italian Social Movement
1969–1987
Succeeded by
European Parliament
New parliament Member of the European Parliament for Southern Italy
1979–1988
Succeeded by
Title jointly held
Italian Chamber of Deputies
New parliament Member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies
Legislatures:
I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X

1948–1988
Succeeded by
Title jointly held