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Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
of popular opinion seemed too great for many fascists. Despite Mussolini’s
order that intimidation should not take place (he was convinced, probably
correctly, that he would win a majority under the new electoral law in any
case), fascist leaders in the provinces did not hesitate to use violence in
order to ensure victory. This was done—significantly—even in those prov-
inces, like Ferrara, where the fascists were in any case assured of a large
majority, indicating that the objective was less a majority than total confor-
mity and virtual unanimity.1
Ironically, many of the same provincial leaders would find their disre-
gard for the basic democratic principles of electoral choice used against
themselves two years later. Tired of perpetual indiscipline on the part of
provincial fascist leaders, who often based their challenges to Mussolini on
their popularity within their own provinces (that is, on a local legitimacy),
Mussolini determined in 1926 that such leaders should no longer be
elected by their supporters but appointed from the center—in effect, by
Mussolini himself.2 Provincial leaders—the
ras
, as they were called—were wrong-footed by this ruling, torn as they were between their long-standing
——————
1 Italo Balbo, the fascist leader in Ferrara, is alleged to have told his supporters to take the first elector to come out of the voting station and, “even if he has voted for us”, to break his head open, shouting “Bastard, you voted for the socialists”. After this, Balbo was sure that no one would dare to vote against the fascists (Corner 1975, 263).
2 A further reason for this was very probably the tendency for provincial fascist assemblies to degenerate into open battles between the factions that had formed within the movement. See letter of party secretary to federations, December 1, 1923, in which people attending assemblies are told to leave their guns at the door. (See Aquarone 1965, 343).
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and subversive hatred of Rome and its politics, and the obligation to show
discipline within a paramilitary organization. In this conflict, Mussolini
held most of the cards and, almost inevitably, the call to discipline won
out. The message he sent to his followers was clear: hierarchy was to be
respected on all occasions and from that point onwards all appointments
would be made from the center. Within the Fascist Party itself, therefore,
elections were eliminated and
designation from above
became the rule. In no circumstances should the people—not even the fascist faithful—be given
the chance to choose.
The same principle was applied widely from 1926 onwards. Elected
municipal councils were replaced by nominated bodies; the town mayor
was replaced by the newly-created figure of the fascist
podestà
, nominated by the Prefect; and union organizations no longer elected their own representatives. Even the Italian Jewish community came under attack in the late
1920s because its inner councils were elected rather than appointed; it was
feared that this example might be followed by others and could prove an
embarrassment to fascism.
Popular Participation: Terms, Conditions and Objectives
Denial of the principle of elections solved certain problems for the re-
gime, but it did leave the government with the difficulty of establishing
some kind of channel of communication with the people—without allow-
ing the people any kind of say. The essential conundrum facing Mussolini
was that of seeking popular approval, while at the same time denying any
spontaneity to the expression of that approval. After all, the fascist regime
claimed to be “popular”; Giuseppe Bottai even asserted that the regime
was more democratic than the traditional democracies because it had
solved the problem of the tension between elite and masses by unifying
the two; and yet, very obviously, the regime could not trust the people to
express an opinion. The use of the plebiscite is one of the ways in which
the fascist movement attempted to solve this dilemma. It permitted mass
participation, but it conceded no power or responsibility. This was per-
fectly in line with fascist thinking.
As any student of fascism knows, if the people were denied any form
of real election and all appointments were made from above, it was far
P L E B I S C I T E S I N F A S C I S T I T A L Y
177
from true that, under fascism, the people were absent from the scene. The
populist element in fascism reserved a significant role for the people; in-
deed, in many ways the people were much more present than they had ever
been before. Before the First World War, no one had been able to stand in
Piazza Venezia in Rome and scream replies to the questions shouted from
the balcony by the national leader. Under fascism, the piazza—the central
focus of any Italian town or village—assumed a new importance as a place
where people gathered to hear speeches by local leaders or speeches re-
layed by radio by the
duce
himself in Rome. Moreover, if people were not invited to vote in free elections, they were still “encouraged” to participate
in a whole range of activities organized by the Fascist Party and by other
related fascist groups. The leisure organization—the
Opera Nazionale
Dopolavoro
—was the most obvious example. Indeed, the undoubted totali-
tarian pretensions of fascism produced situations of almost frenetic activi-
ty in many provinces as local leaders worked to involve as many people as
possible in some kind of fascist activity.
What characterized this kind of political participation was that it was
realized not by voting but by wearing a uniform, belonging to a fascist
organization, sending one’s children to a fascist youth group, giving a cer-
tain kind of salute, and so on. This represented a specific kind of political
participation, one no longer based on individual choice but on involvement
in collective activity and on behaving in a certain way. In these circum-
stances, political conviction took second place to
public
behavior. What was important was that the individual had
to be seen
to be part of the collective effort; inner thoughts were less important.
The intense activity of the fascist regime throughout its entire existence
in organizing mass rallies, huge party meetings, fascist festivals and so on
was determined by this imperative. It was not that the people were absent,
therefore; it was rather that the channels of communication between the
people and their government had been changed, as had the content and
the significance of that communication. It is, of course, true that popular
participation was always, in a sense, one-directional. People could reply to
Mussolini’s questions from his balcony in Rome—but their replies could
only be those indicating agreement; the people were essentially audience to,
and chorus in, a play in which the protagonists were always others. This
kind of popular participation was essentially about creating a sense of
being part of a common narrative. The constant invocation of History,
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P A U L C O R N E R
and of fascism’s major role in History, was a way of underlining the same
common belonging to a unique story.
The mass demonstration was the classic way of attempting to create a
sense of commonality, of unity of purpose, among the population. Even
those present against their will (non-attenders were identified and pun-
ished) were in some way involved in the process and could hardly fail to be
touched by the impression of unity. In this respect, what was important
was that people had to, like all the others, behave
as if
they believed. Again, it was collective
action
rather than internal conviction that was to be emphasized. Mussolini’s balcony questions to the crowd usually invited the an-
swer “To us!”—the collective and unifying “we” in its various forms being
the characteristic of the replies.
So Why the Plebiscite?
This brings us nearer to the question of why fascism—which rejected all
forms of election—decided to hold plebiscites in 1929 and 1934. The first
plebiscite generated a great deal of noise in Italy; it was clearly seen as an
important test. The second passed almost unnoticed.
It should be noted that the 1929 plebiscite was held to renew the 1924
parliament; at least formally, therefore, the procedure appeared to observe
the rules governing the end of the 1924 legislature. Similarly, the 1934
plebiscite marked the end of the 1929 legislature. Analogies with previous
elections ended there, however. The 1929 plebiscite asked a significant
proportion of the male population to reply “Yes” or “No” to the question,
“Do you approve the list of parliamentary deputies drawn up by the na-
tional Grand Council?” But, since it was readily apparent to everyone, fas-
cists included, that parliament had ceased to count for anything, the vote
was seen everywhere as a request for a generic approval of fascist govern-
ment.
It is evident that the plebiscites—particularly the first—were above all
exercises in international and internal legitimization. In reply to
international criticism coming from the democracies, the fascist regime
wished to demonstrate that the people, when asked, really did support the
regime and that the traditional Western democratic model, which reflected
class conflict, had been superseded by a system that managed to achieve