Mario Scelba
Democrazia Cristiana (1954-1960)
The Rusty Sicilian
When the ‘Iron Sicilian’ came to power in 1954, it seemed that Italy would be led by a dynamic and assertive Premier with a clear vision – whether that was fundamentally reactionary or progressive is a matter of debate – of what he wanted Italy to be. That this perception did not last is testament to the power of events beyond a Prime Minister’s control.
Nobody expected a contest when De Gasperi left office in early 1954 and nobody expected his successor to be anyone but Mario Scelba. The former Interior Minister, famous for his expansion of the police force and his harsh suppression of left-wing protests, was De Gasperi’s right-hand man and conservative attack dog. When he took over, it was only natural that his first moves in office should have been a purge of Communist Party members in the state bureaucracy at all levels and a ban on Communist usage of state property for the purposes of “spreading propaganda” (L’Unita, the Communist Party newspaper, was found to be printed in government-owned facilities and was forced to relocate at great expense to the party). His tough stance against the PCI was applauded in the country, though party members were quick to take to the streets in opposition to the “neo-fascist” residing at the Palazzo Chigi. These protests in the summer of 1954 would be quashed by Scelba’s police force, operating with similar severity as seen in the late 1940s, and the prospect of a general strike to bring down the government was incredibly short-lived. The CGIL (the Communist-influenced trade union confederation), however willing it was to take on the government and force it to reverse its authoritarian policies, was facing an electorally popular and legislatively powerful coalition: any fight with the Christian Democrats would have meant more stringent trade union legislation. The calculations on both sides of the political divide – where the left-wing opposition judged the risk of popular action too great and the right-wing government was able to dictate policies unimpeded – would show the way, some said, of things to come. Italy, in the first few years after De Gasperi resigned, was set to be ruled by American-backed strongmen with inclinations towards subverting democracy – or, at least, that is how the future looked to Italians on the left.
In the realm of social reform, however, Scelba could not be branded a staunch right-winger. The Italian welfare system had come some way under De Gasperi, with new provisions for unemployment insurance, extensions to earnings replacement benefits, a national fund for increasing economic housing stock, and many more besides. Scelba wanted to carry on the legacy of his predecessor and hoped to ameliorate the harsh image that he had garnered on the left, forcing his iron fist into the velvet glove of welfare reform. There were obstacles to Scelba’s plans, it must be noted, and his ultimate failure to make long-lasting changes to the country’s welfare policy does not lie solely with the Prime Minister. For one, his Finance Minister, Giuseppe Pella, was a fiscal conservative who harboured poorly concealed ambitions to succeed Scelba should the government fall: his co-operation on welfare reforms was vital, but not forthcoming. They both inhabited the same ideological space – that of the pro-European, pro-American, right-wing partisan of political Catholicism – and thus the Premier and his Finance Minister were unlikely to come to blows over the ordeal. Then, of course, was the opposition of the Catholic Church to the “nationalisation” of local services offered by organisations such as ‘Azione Cattolica’. Pope Pius XII was known to have the ear of the Italian Prime Minister, who – far more than Alcide De Gasperi – saw the DC’s relationship with the Church as irreplaceable. Scelba was not the sort of man to make secular challenges to the power of Church, opting always to keep the electoral organisation of Democrazia Cristiana within the hands of Catholic lay organisations, and thus was receptive to the private Papal criticisms of his projected reforms. Astoundingly, for a leader who had built himself a reputation for decisiveness, Scelba scaled back his plans and reconvened with his Finance Minister to approve more modest proposals on increasing funds for housebuilding and an extension of the family allowance to all workers (to be phased in by 1956). Land reforms in the South, where the ‘Cassa del Mezzogiorno’ (the ‘Fund for the South’, in English) was beginning to bring infrastructure to isolated rural communities and non-agricultural jobs, were also on the agenda and would be slowly enacted by the Ministry of Agriculture from 1955 to 1960.
At the time, these early actions on the part of the government would set the narrative of Scelba as an amiable anti-communist leader, reforming social policy with one hand and beating the reds with the other. Living through these years, many Italians counted themselves thankful for the leadership of the DC and the continued Degasperian spirit in which the party governed. These days were not to last, however, and the events of 1956 and beyond would wrest control of the political narrative away from Scelba’s government and place it into the hands of non-state actors. 1955, then, was seen as the last good year for Scelba’s government. That year’s presidential election had seen Cesare Merzagora, an independent with strong ties to the DC, win with only a token opposition from the likes of Giovanni Gronchi (the radical Tuscan who saw Italy’s future as a non-aligned nation) and Luigi Einaudi (the outgoing President hoping for a second chance). He had been the candidate of Scelba and the party’s Secretary, Guido Gonella, and was seen as a symbol of the victory of the centre and right-wing elements of the party, which greatly enthused the Prime Minister for the coming years.
As the government entered 1956, the Italian political system seemed to be set with Christian Democracy dominating as the sole representative of Catholic opinion whilst the Communists and Socialists pulled away from each other and ate into each other’s votes. The divisions on the opposition side were to carry on through to the local elections in June, which showed a bleak picture for the Communist Party: in places as diverse as Brescia, Florence, and Foggia, the Socialists had leapfrogged the Communists and pushed them to either third or fourth place. The party had spent two years facing discrimination from the government, wrestling with what it meant to be a Marxist-Leninist party in a Stalin-less world (an endeavour made all the more complicated by Khrushchev’s ‘Secret Speech’), and having their attempts at industrial action thwarted at every turn by the effectiveness of the police force. Electorally, these issues served only to suppress the enthusiasm for the PCI and turn a good number of industrial workers from the polls altogether. It was thus greeted with apocalyptic foreboding when, later that year, an uprising in Budapest sparked a heavy-handed Soviet reaction that exposed rifts throughout the international communist movement. The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 had promised a new age of liberal, pluralistic communism within the young socialist state and gave hope to many reform-minded communists across the world: its crushing under the tanks and jackboots of the Soviets would thus lead to such communists departing their respective national parties. In Italy, the consequences were especially dire for the dogmatically pro-Soviet leadership, as Antonio Giolitti (grandson of Giovanni Giolitti) led a faction of the PCI to leave and join the PSI whilst over a hundred intellectuals in the party issued a memorandum denouncing the party leadership for its sclerotic acquiescence to Moscow.
The Christian Democrats rejoiced at the troubles of the PCI, lapping up the infighting that was taking place amongst the opposition as if it were some elaborately staged melodrama that existed for their entertainment. At the same time, the government was keen to exploit the failure of the Franco-British intervention in the Suez Canal by sending Scelba to Washington, D.C. to be photographed next to President Eisenhower (a man who towered over the stocky Sicilian) after he had won re-election. Talks were had between the two men and Scelba reaffirmed Italy’s commitment to NATO and American foreign policy goals, which delighted the American President and vexed the French and British. The government should have dominated the public conversation with its pro-American appeals and unity in the face of a divided opposition, but Scelba’s return from Washington garnered far less attention than Communist Party infighting and the leader of the Socialist Party, Pietro Nenni, calling for a break with Togliatti’s PCI. Suez was on the periphery of the Italian public conscience in the winter of 1956 and faded from it rapidly, but the fallout from the Hungarian intervention persisted.
Scelba was caught between the headline-grabbing dramatics of the left and the conservative instincts of his own party, which meant smaller reforms lost public attention whilst larger reforms (such as a planned reform of the tax system) were blocked by a Council of Ministers that didn’t want to alienate the Church or the business community. It was in this state of affairs that Scelba would struggle to find a new political purpose, which he believed could be clarified by a reshuffle of the government. It was a bold move, but a man with a large majority could afford to be bold: Giuseppe Pella (Finance) moved to the Interior Ministry, Attilio Piccioni (Public Works) moved to the Foreign Ministry, and Secretary Gonella (Justice) was dumped in favour of Antoni Segni (the reforming ex-Agriculture Minister and pro-European lawyer). The spring 1957 reshuffle was supposed to bring a new sense of dynamism to the government and, for a moment, it seemed that the promotions of some younger, reform-minded members (Aldo Moro, Mariano Rumor and Luigi Gui among them) would ensure a new series of social reforms. With the Treaty of Rome signed in March 1957 and Italy standing alongside its European partners in triumph, it was practically self-evident that the new growth of the economy could ensure social reforms and welfare spending hitherto unseen. That hope, however, was dashed when – at the party conference in June 1957 – a factional battle broke out over who should replace Guido Gonella as Secretary of the DC. Originally wanting to keep Guido Gonella in place, the right and centre parts of the party soon gathered around Bernardo Mattarella, the Transport Minister who was a member of Catholic Action and built the Sicilian Democrazia Cristiana after World War Two. Facing him from the left was Amintore Fanfani. He was a staunch progressive with a large following in the party, seeing the need for a secular mass party organisation as the future of the DC and promising to capitalise on Italy’s new role in the European Community.
Fanfani won with rousing speeches and an opponent who had dialled back his campaign when he knew the centre was deserting leftwards, putting the new Secretary in the odd position of being totally opposed to his Prime Minister.
The humiliation felt by Scelba over this loss was only tempered the following year, when the Christian Democrats won another huge majority over the Communists and Socialists. Nenni had managed to overtake Togliatti’s party in share of the vote and in the Chamber of Deputies, which was the big success story for those on the moderate left of the Italian political spectrum. Whilst the Communists licked their wounds and prepared for more years of trouble and vote-haemorrhaging, Mario Scelba made a last-ditch attempt to stamp some authority on his party before the whispers of a leadership challenge took hold. He stripped his coalition of the Republican Party and the Italian Democratic Socialist Party (the Social Democrats’ official name), meaning he was joined only by the votes and ministers of the right-wing Liberal Party when the third legislature of the Italian Republic reconvened. But, once again, events would look to wrest control of the narrative once more.
The Social Democrats were soon courted by Nenni’s Socialists, the two parties hashing out an unofficial alliance by the beginning of 1959 and a formal reunification finally taking place when the two parties held a joint conference in Florence in June 1961. Whilst Fanfani and the internal left had been ordered to get into line and were, indeed, chastened by Scelba’s drastic dismantling of the Degasperian ideal of ‘il centrismo’, the unity of the centre-left in the country began to worry left-leaning party members. If the PSDI should re-join the PSI whilst Democrazia Cristiana relied on the Liberals, then the dominant-party system that Italy had enjoyed for a decade or so would collapse into a two-party system: a fate inconceivably worse than death, to hear some DC leaders tell it. 1958 would also bring with it more bad news for the conservatives in the party, as the Papal Conclave to elect Pope Pius XII’s successor would settle upon a man (to be known as Pope John XXIII) for whom the pastoral role of the Church took primacy over politics. The idea of relying solely on the Church for electioneering was quick to become old-fashioned so soon after the massive victory for the DC in 1958, but the writing was on the wall for Scelba come 1959 and his successor was fairly obvious to everyone around him.
In April 1960, in the run-up to the Christian Democrats’ party conference, Mario Scelba spoke to President Merzagora to offer his resignation. It was a painful decision taken after many months of anguish. Indeed, he felt it was forced upon him by a party being overtaken by the burgeoning of the left and the depoliticisation of the Catholic Church. The country had benefited from his modest reforms and, with the economy booming after the lean post-war years, most of the Italian people had never known a quality of life so good. Scelba would step down, his successor designated soon after with no alternative candidates even being considered, and he would go on to be something of a grandee in Italian and European politics for decades after. Losing out to a liberal candidate for the Presidency of the Commission of European Communities in 1972 would be his last political folly before he retired and later died in Rome in 1991.