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Agostino Depretis

Agostino Depretis (31 January 1813 – 29 July 1887) was an Italian statesman and politician. He served as Prime Minister of Italy for several stretches between 1876 and 1887, and was leader of the Historical Left parliamentary group for more than a decade. He is the fourth-longest serving Prime Minister in Italian history, after Benito Mussolini, Giovanni Giolitti and Silvio Berlusconi. Depretis is widely considered one of the most powerful and important politicians in Italian history.[1]

Agostino Depretis
Prime Minister of Italy
In office
29 May 1881 – 29 July 1887
MonarchUmberto I
Preceded byBenedetto Cairoli
Succeeded byFrancesco Crispi
In office
19 December 1878 – 14 July 1879
MonarchUmberto I
Preceded byBenedetto Cairoli
Succeeded byBenedetto Cairoli
In office
25 March 1876 – 24 March 1878
MonarchsVictor Emmanuel II
Umberto I
Preceded byMarco Minghetti
Succeeded byBenedetto Cairoli
Minister of the Interior
In office
25 November 1879 – 29 July 1887
Prime MinisterBenedetto Cairoli
Himself
Preceded byTommaso Villa
Succeeded byFrancesco Crispi
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
4 April 1886 – 29 July 1886
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byCarlo Felice Nicolis
Succeeded byFrancesco Crispi
In office
29 June 1885 – 6 October 1885
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byPasquale Stanislao Mancini
Succeeded byCarlo Felice Nicolis
In office
19 December 1878 – 14 July 1879
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byBenedetto Cairoli
Succeeded byBenedetto Cairoli
In office
26 December 1877 – 24 March 1878
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byLuigi Amedeo Melegari
Succeeded byLuigi Corti
Minister of Finance
In office
25 March 1876 – 26 December 1877
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byGirolamo Cantelli
Succeeded byAgostino Magliani
In office
17 February 1867 – 10 April 1867
Prime MinisterBettino Ricasoli
Preceded byAntonio Scialoja
Succeeded byFrancesco Ferrara
Minister of the Navy
In office
20 June 1866 – 17 February 1867
Prime MinisterBettino Ricasoli
Preceded byDiego Angioletti
Succeeded byGiuseppe Biancheri
Minister of Public Works
In office
3 March 1862 – 8 December 1862
Prime MinisterUrbano Rattazzi
Preceded byUbaldino Peruzzi
Succeeded byLuigi Federico Menabrea
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
18 February 1861 – 29 July 1887
ConstituencyStradella
Personal details
Born(1813-01-31)31 January 1813
Stradella, Lombardy,
Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy
Died29 July 1887(1887-07-29) (aged 74)
Stradella, Lombardy,
Kingdom of Italy
Political partyHistorical Left

He was a master in the political art of Trasformismo, the method of making a flexible, centrist coalition of government which isolated the extremes of the left and the right in Italian politics after the unification.[2]

Early life and Italian Unification

Depretis was born at Bressana Bottarone, near Stradella, which at the time was a province of the French Empire of Napoleon and now is in the province of Pavia, Lombardy.[3] After Napoleon's defeat and restoration of the Kingdom of Sardinia, Depretis graduated in law and started working as lawyer.

From early manhood he was a disciple of Giuseppe Mazzini and affiliated with the La Giovine Italia. He took an active part in the Mazzinian conspiracies and was nearly captured by the Austrians while smuggling arms into Milan. Elected deputy in 1848, he joined the Left and founded the newspaper Il Diritto, but he held no political offices.[4]

 
Agostino Depretis in 1860.

In the same period he strongly opposed the policies of the Piedmontese Prime Minister Camillo Benso di Cavour and voted against the main reforms that he presented, including the bill regarding the Piedmontese participation to the Crimean War. Despite their struggles, after the annexation of Lombardy by the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1859, Cavour appointed Depretis governor of Brescia.[5]

In 1860, Giuseppe Garibaldi sailed with his Expedition of the Thousand toward Sicily. The Expedition was formed by corps of volunteers led by Garibaldi in order to conquer the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, ruled by the Bourbons. The project was an ambitious and risky venture aiming to conquer, with a thousand men, a kingdom with a larger regular army and a more powerful navy. The expedition was a success and concluded with a plebiscite that brought Naples and Sicily into the Kingdom of Sardinia, the last territorial conquest before the creation of the Kingdom of Italy on 17 March 1861.[6]

The sea venture was the only desired action that was jointly decided by the "four fathers of the nation" Giuseppe Mazzini, Giuseppe Garibaldi, Victor Emmanuel II, and Camillo Cavour, pursuing divergent goals.[7] The various groups participated in the expedition for a variety of reasons: for Garibaldi, it was to achieve a united Italy; to the Sicilian bourgeoisie, an independent Sicily as part of the kingdom of Italy, and for the mass farmers, land distribution and the end of oppression.[7]

In 1860 Depretis went to Sicily on a mission to reconcile the policy of Cavour, who desired the immediate incorporation of the island in the Kingdom of Italy, with that of Garibaldi, who wished to postpone the Sicilian plebiscite until after the liberation of Naples and Rome. Depretis replaced Garibaldi's close councilor Francesco Crispi as pro-dictator (prodittatore) of Sicily, during the dictatorial government; however he failed in his attempt to win round Garibaldi and his comrades to the idea of immediately incorporating Sicily into the new Italian kingdom, and resigned in September 1860.[8]

In government

Minister of Public Works

After Cavour's death king Victor Emmanuel II gave the task to form a new government firstly to Bettino Ricasoli and then to Urbano Rattazzi; Rattazzi was the leader of the Left and created a cabinet composed by both political groups. On 3 March 1862, Depretis was appointed Minister of Public Works, and served as intermediary in arranging with Garibaldi.[9]

However, in August 1862 the Royal Italian Army defeated Garibaldi's army of volunteers, who were marching from Sicily towards Rome, with the intent of annexing it into the Kingdom of Italy. In the battle, which took place a few kilometers from Gambarie, Garibaldi was wounded and taken as prisoner. Rattazzi's policy of repression towards Garibaldi at Aspromonte, caused lot of public protests and the Prime Minister was forced to resign in September 1862.[8][10]

Moreover, Francesco Crispi accused Depretis of having mounted the Mazzinian riots in Sarnico in May 1862 to discredit Garibaldi. After the fall of the Rattazzi government, therefore, it was easy to predict the end of Depretis's political career, when Crispi was elected leader of the Left.[11] Depretis remained on the sidelines during the 8th legislature (1863–65), but he regularly participated in the parliamentary works, intervening regarding the laws for administrative unification and declaring himself hostile to regionalism. He was particularly active during the electoral campaign of 1865 and at the beginning of the 9th legislature he was elected Vice President of the Chamber of Deputies.[12]

Minister of Navy

In 1866, in anticipation of the war with the Austrian Empire, after the signing of the Italo-Prussian alliance, Ricasoli was appointed Prime Minister by the king to replace General Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora, who would lead the Italian troops during the war. The king wanted to established a government of "national conciliation" that included members both form the Right and the Left.

 

On 20 June, Depretis was appointed Minister of the Navy,[8] on the same day the Third Italian War of Independence began.[13] After the Italian defeat in the Battle of Custoza, Depretis insisted with admiral Carlo Persano on the attack against the island of Lissa, as a revenge for Custoza. But he also refused to give to admiral Persano detailed orders about the expedition in the Adriatic Sea against the fleet led by Wilhelm von Tegetthoff. However the Italian Royal Navy was soundly defeated. To quell the public outcry after the two defeats, Depretis called for process Persano, who was judged by the Italian Senate, condemned for incompetence in 1867 and cashiered from duty.[14] However the war ended in an Austrian defeat, with Austria conceding the region of Venetia to Italy. Italy's acquisition of this wealthy and populous territory represented a major step in the process of Italian unification.[15]

On 17 February 1867, Depretis resigned as Minister of the Navy. His tenure as minister was quite controversial, his apologists contend, however, that, as an inexperienced civilian, he could not have made sudden changes in naval arrangements without disorganizing the fleet, and that in view of the impending hostilities he was obliged to accept the dispositions of his predecessors.[8]

Leader of the Left

 
Depretis during 1870s.

On 17 February 1867 Depretis was appointed Minister of Finance in the second cabinet of Ricasoli; however after few months, on 10 April, Ricasoli resigned and Depretis returned to be a simple deputy.

Upon the death of Rattazzi in 1873, Depretis became leader of the Left. On 25 June 1873, the conservative government of Giovanni Lanza fell, beaten by a vote that saw the Depretis's moderate Left united with a large part of the Right, no longer in support of the Minister of Finance Quintino Sella; in fact Sella abandoned the proposal of a further fiscal tightening in order to achieve a balanced budget.[16] Victor Emmanuel II then asked the conservative Marco Minghetti to form a new government, inviting him to include also members from the Left. Minghetti accepted the suggestion but his efforts to agree with Depretis were vain.

Minghetti and Sella were involved into an ambitious program of budget which needed a strong majority, for which they tried to oblige the Independents to choose their side, beginning to build a two-party system as in the United Kingdom.[17] However, in the Italian non-partisan political system, hugely affected by localism and corruption, their bet was equivalent to an all-in that afterwards they lost.[18]

The 1874 election did not give to Minghetti the advantage he was hoping, especially for the high support to Depretis's opposition in Southern Italy.[19] Minghetti's government survived, but the bipolarisation of the Parliament he had imposed, strengthened the Left so that it could take the leadership of the country. Two years later, MPs from Tuscany became dissatisfied with the government after it refused to intervene in the financial problems of Florence. The government was defeated on a vote on nationalising railways on 18 March 1876 and Minghetti was forced to resign.[20] As a result, Depretis became Prime Minister, with 414 of the 508 MPs supporting the government.[21] The fall of the Minghetti's cabinet was called, by political commentators, the "parliamentary revolution".[22]

Prime Minister of Italy

First term

 
Depretis first cabinet.

On 25 March 1876, Depretis sworn in as Prime Minister; his cabinet was the first one to be composed only by members of the Left. Prominent ministers were Giovanni Nicotera, Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Michele Coppino, Giuseppe Zanardelli and Benedetto Brin.

To strengthen his position, Depretis called for new election in November.[20] For the first time, the left-wing won an election, gaining almost 70% of votes and taking 414 of the 508 seats, of which 12 were extreme left-wingers.[20] As opposed to the previous right-wing governments, whose members were largely aristocrats representing rentiers from the north of the country, and held moderate political views including loyalty to the crown and low government spending,[23] the left-wing government represented the bourgeoisie of the south of the country and supported low taxation, secularism, a strong foreign policy and public jobs.[20]

The main reform proposed by the government was the school one that took its name from Minister Coppino and was presented on 15 July 1877. The law introduced compulsory, secular and free primary education for children aged six to nine. On the other hand, while maintaining the electoral promises, Depretis raised the minimum exemption for the mobile wealth tax from 250 to 800 lire, granting greater deductions for industrial income. Important, although not very effective, was the decree of 25 August 1876 which regulated the office of the Prime Minister with the will to contain the monarchical power and above all the conflict of ministers.

The foreign policy of his first government was prudent, similar to that of the cabinets which had preceded it. His policies created criticisms from the progressives who were pushing for an approach to German Empire to fight France. This francophobic attitude increased in May 1877 when the government of Albert de Broglie, favorable to clericals positions, sworn in Paris. The government however had to face the violent attacks against the Minister of the Interior Nicotera, who was considered guilty, according to a part of the majority, of abuses and illegality; unable to cope with the crisis, Depretis decided to resign in December 1877.

The king, gave again to Depretis the task of forming a new cabinet; it was the last political act of the king who would die after few months. Depretis failed in stopping the contrasts within the Left. He was criticized for having abolished the Ministry of Agriculture, Industry and Commerce and having established the Ministry of Treasury in order to achieve greater control over state budget. On 11 March 1878, Depretis resigned from his office, when his candidate lost the election to become President of the Chamber of Deputies; the following cabinet was led by another prominent leftist member Benedetto Cairoli.

Second term

In November 1879, Depretis joined the Cairoli cabinet as Minister of the Interior. In the same period, a general irritation was caused by Cairoli and Count Corti's policy of clean hands at the Berlin Congress, where Italy obtained nothing, while Austria-Hungary secured a European mandate to occupy Bosnia and Herzegovina. A few months later the attempt of Giovanni Passannante to assassinate King Humbert I at Naples on 12 December 1878, caused Cairoli's downfall.[8]

Depretis was appointed Prime Minister by the king; his cabinet was formed by members of the Left and of the Right. On 24 June 1879 the Italian Senate approved, with significant amendments, the bill on the abolition of the tax on the mill. However, on 3 July, the Chamber rejected the law and voted down the government; third cabinet of Depretis therefore had to resign after only six months of troubled political life and the next government was again led by Cairoli, on 14 July.

Third term

 
Agostino Depretis in 1885.

Following the French occupation of Tunis on 11 May 1881, in view of popular indignation Cairoli resigned in order to avoid making inopportune declarations to the Chamber. The king, after the failed attempt by Quintino Sella to establish a new cabinet, appointed Depretis once again Prime Minister.

On 20 May 1882, Depretis signed the Triple Alliance, a secret military agreement between Italy, Germany and Austria-Hungary to oppose the power of France and Russia. Italy sought support against France shortly after it lost North African ambitions to the French. Each member promised mutual support in the event of an attack by any other great power. The treaty provided that Germany and Austria-Hungary were to assist Italy if it was attacked by France without provocation. In turn, Italy would assist Germany if attacked by France. In the event of a war between Austria-Hungary and Russia, Italy promised to remain neutral.

In domestic policy, 1882 saw the approval of the electoral reform of which Depretis had also become the main spokesman and on 22 January the parliament approved what the Prime Minister had called "the only possible universal suffrage". All men of at least 21 years of age who had attended at least the first two years of elementary school or who contributed an annual tax of no less than 19.80 lire were entitled to vote. the voting age was lowered from 25 to 21 and the tax requirement lowered from 40 to ₤19.80, whilst men with three years of primary education were exempted from it.[24] This resulted in the number of eligible voters increasing from 621,896 at the 1880 elections to 2,017,829.[25] The electoral system was changed from one based on single-member constituencies to one based on small multi-member constituencies with between two and five seats.[24] Voters had as many votes as there were candidates, except in constituencies with five seats, in which they were limited to four votes.[26] To be elected in the first round a candidate needed an absolute majority of the votes cast and to receive a number of votes equivalent to at least one-eighth of the number registered voters. If a second round was required, the number of candidates going through was double the number of seats available.[26]

In the 1882 general election the Left emerged as the largest in Parliament, winning 289 of the 508 seats; the Right arrived second with 147 seats.[27] Depretis was confirmed Prime Minister by the king.

During his long tenure Depretis recomposed his cabinet four times, first throwing out Giuseppe Zanardelli and Alfredo Baccarini in order to please the Right, and subsequently bestowing portfolios upon Cesare Ricotti-Magnani, Robilant and other Conservatives, so as to complete the political process known as Trasformismo.[8]

Depretis also completed the railway system and initiated colonial policy by the occupation of Massawa; but, at the same time, he increased indirect taxation, corrupted the parliamentary parties, and, by extravagance in public works, impaired the stability of Italian finance.[8] He argued that a wider suffrage would give citizens a moral dignity and sense of responsibility.[28]

Despite an insistent gout, Depretis remained Prime Minister until his death. More and more often he gathered the government in the living room of his house, at Via Nazionale in Rome. Transferred to Stradella due to the aggravation of the disease, he died there on 29 July 1887, at 74 years old. After the funeral he was buried in the cemetery of his home town. He was replaced at the head of the Left and at the head of the government by Francesco Crispi.

Political ideology and legacy

 
A cartoon about Depretis, accusing him of being a chameleonic politician.

Depretis was the founder and the main proponent of Trasformismo ("Transformism"), a method of making a flexible centrist coalition of government which isolated the extremes of the left and the right. The process was initiated in 1883, when he moved to the right and reshuffled his government to include Marco Minghetti's conservatives. This was a move Depretis had been considering for a while before 1883. The aim was to ensure a stable government that would avoid weakening the institutions by extreme shifts to the left or right. Depretis felt that a secure government could ensure calm in Italy.

At this time middle class politicians were more concerned with making deals with each other and less about political philosophies and principles. Large coalitions were formed, with members being bribed to join them. The liberals, the main political group, was tied together by informal "gentleman's agreements", but these were always in matters of enriching themselves. Indeed, actual governing did not seem to be happening at all, but since only 2 million men had franchises, most of these wealthy landowners did not have to concern themselves with such things as improving the lives of the people they were supposedly representing democratically.

However trasformismo fed into the debates that the Italian parliamentary system was weak and actually failing; it ultimately became associated with corruption. It was perceived as the sacrifice of principles and policies for short term gain. The system of trasformismo was little loved and seemed to be creating a huge gap between 'Legal' (parliamentary and political) Italy, and 'Real' Italy where the politicians became increasingly isolated. This system brought almost no advantages, illiteracy remained the same in 1912 as before the unification era, and backward economic policies, combined with poor sanitary conditions, continued to prevent the country's rural areas from improving.

References

  1. ^ La dittatura parlamentare di Giolitti
  2. ^ Killinger, The history of Italy, p. 127–28
  3. ^ Agostino Depretis – Dizionario Biografico
  4. ^ Depretis Agostino, pages 60-61
  5. ^ Il presidente del Consiglio, in Illustrazione Italiana, Anno XII, N. 47, 22 November 1885, p. 322.
  6. ^ Raccolta degli atti del governo dittatoriale e prodittatoriale in Sicilia, 1860, Stabilimento tipografico Francesco Lao, Palermo
  7. ^ a b Christopher Duggan (2000). Creare la nazione. Vita di Francesco Crispi. Laterza.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rattazzi, Urbano". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 919. This work in turn cites:
    • Rattazzi, Laetitia (1881). Rattazzi et son temps. Paris.
    • King, Bolton (1899). History of Italian Unity. London.
  9. ^ Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Rattazzi, Urbano" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  10. ^ Fulvio Cammarano, Storia dell'Italia liberale, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2011
  11. ^ Christopher Duggan, Creare la nazione. Vita di Francesco Crispi, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2000
  12. ^ Biografia di Agostino Depretis
  13. ^ Il Risorgimento – Enciclopedia Treccani
  14. ^ Storia Militare n. 215, Parma 2011, p. 64
  15. ^ La Terza Guerra d'Indipendenza
  16. ^ Giancarlo Giordano, Cilindri e feluche. La politica estera dell'Italia dopo l'Unità, Roma, Aracne, 2008
  17. ^ La Stampa, Thursday, 5 November 1874
  18. ^ La Stampa, Sunday, 8 November 1874
  19. ^ La Stampa, Monday, 16 November 1974
  20. ^ a b c d Nohlen & Stöver, p1029
  21. ^ Flynn, John T. Pre-Fascist Italy: Tax and Borrow and Spend, Mises Institute
  22. ^ La rivoluzione parlamentare che segnò la storia d’Italia
  23. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p1028
  24. ^ a b Nohlen & Stöver, pp1029-1030
  25. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p1049
  26. ^ a b Nohlen & Stöver, p1039
  27. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p1082
  28. ^ Frank J. Coppa, Planning, protectionism, and politics in liberal Italy: economics and politics in the Giolittian age (Catholic University of America Press, 1971.)

External links

  • Discorsi parlamentari di Agostino Depretis Vol. I


agostino, depretis, january, 1813, july, 1887, italian, statesman, politician, served, prime, minister, italy, several, stretches, between, 1876, 1887, leader, historical, left, parliamentary, group, more, than, decade, fourth, longest, serving, prime, ministe. Agostino Depretis 31 January 1813 29 July 1887 was an Italian statesman and politician He served as Prime Minister of Italy for several stretches between 1876 and 1887 and was leader of the Historical Left parliamentary group for more than a decade He is the fourth longest serving Prime Minister in Italian history after Benito Mussolini Giovanni Giolitti and Silvio Berlusconi Depretis is widely considered one of the most powerful and important politicians in Italian history 1 His ExcellencyAgostino DepretisPrime Minister of ItalyIn office 29 May 1881 29 July 1887MonarchUmberto IPreceded byBenedetto CairoliSucceeded byFrancesco CrispiIn office 19 December 1878 14 July 1879MonarchUmberto IPreceded byBenedetto CairoliSucceeded byBenedetto CairoliIn office 25 March 1876 24 March 1878MonarchsVictor Emmanuel II Umberto IPreceded byMarco MinghettiSucceeded byBenedetto CairoliMinister of the InteriorIn office 25 November 1879 29 July 1887Prime MinisterBenedetto CairoliHimselfPreceded byTommaso VillaSucceeded byFrancesco CrispiMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 4 April 1886 29 July 1886Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byCarlo Felice NicolisSucceeded byFrancesco CrispiIn office 29 June 1885 6 October 1885Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byPasquale Stanislao ManciniSucceeded byCarlo Felice NicolisIn office 19 December 1878 14 July 1879Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byBenedetto CairoliSucceeded byBenedetto CairoliIn office 26 December 1877 24 March 1878Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byLuigi Amedeo MelegariSucceeded byLuigi CortiMinister of FinanceIn office 25 March 1876 26 December 1877Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byGirolamo CantelliSucceeded byAgostino MaglianiIn office 17 February 1867 10 April 1867Prime MinisterBettino RicasoliPreceded byAntonio ScialojaSucceeded byFrancesco FerraraMinister of the NavyIn office 20 June 1866 17 February 1867Prime MinisterBettino RicasoliPreceded byDiego AngiolettiSucceeded byGiuseppe BiancheriMinister of Public WorksIn office 3 March 1862 8 December 1862Prime MinisterUrbano RattazziPreceded byUbaldino PeruzziSucceeded byLuigi Federico MenabreaMember of the Chamber of DeputiesIn office 18 February 1861 29 July 1887ConstituencyStradellaPersonal detailsBorn 1813 01 31 31 January 1813Stradella Lombardy Napoleonic Kingdom of ItalyDied29 July 1887 1887 07 29 aged 74 Stradella Lombardy Kingdom of ItalyPolitical partyHistorical LeftHe was a master in the political art of Trasformismo the method of making a flexible centrist coalition of government which isolated the extremes of the left and the right in Italian politics after the unification 2 Contents 1 Early life and Italian Unification 2 In government 2 1 Minister of Public Works 2 2 Minister of Navy 3 Leader of the Left 4 Prime Minister of Italy 4 1 First term 4 2 Second term 4 3 Third term 5 Political ideology and legacy 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and Italian Unification EditDepretis was born at Bressana Bottarone near Stradella which at the time was a province of the French Empire of Napoleon and now is in the province of Pavia Lombardy 3 After Napoleon s defeat and restoration of the Kingdom of Sardinia Depretis graduated in law and started working as lawyer From early manhood he was a disciple of Giuseppe Mazzini and affiliated with the La Giovine Italia He took an active part in the Mazzinian conspiracies and was nearly captured by the Austrians while smuggling arms into Milan Elected deputy in 1848 he joined the Left and founded the newspaper Il Diritto but he held no political offices 4 Agostino Depretis in 1860 In the same period he strongly opposed the policies of the Piedmontese Prime Minister Camillo Benso di Cavour and voted against the main reforms that he presented including the bill regarding the Piedmontese participation to the Crimean War Despite their struggles after the annexation of Lombardy by the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1859 Cavour appointed Depretis governor of Brescia 5 In 1860 Giuseppe Garibaldi sailed with his Expedition of the Thousand toward Sicily The Expedition was formed by corps of volunteers led by Garibaldi in order to conquer the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies ruled by the Bourbons The project was an ambitious and risky venture aiming to conquer with a thousand men a kingdom with a larger regular army and a more powerful navy The expedition was a success and concluded with a plebiscite that brought Naples and Sicily into the Kingdom of Sardinia the last territorial conquest before the creation of the Kingdom of Italy on 17 March 1861 6 The sea venture was the only desired action that was jointly decided by the four fathers of the nation Giuseppe Mazzini Giuseppe Garibaldi Victor Emmanuel II and Camillo Cavour pursuing divergent goals 7 The various groups participated in the expedition for a variety of reasons for Garibaldi it was to achieve a united Italy to the Sicilian bourgeoisie an independent Sicily as part of the kingdom of Italy and for the mass farmers land distribution and the end of oppression 7 In 1860 Depretis went to Sicily on a mission to reconcile the policy of Cavour who desired the immediate incorporation of the island in the Kingdom of Italy with that of Garibaldi who wished to postpone the Sicilian plebiscite until after the liberation of Naples and Rome Depretis replaced Garibaldi s close councilor Francesco Crispi as pro dictator prodittatore of Sicily during the dictatorial government however he failed in his attempt to win round Garibaldi and his comrades to the idea of immediately incorporating Sicily into the new Italian kingdom and resigned in September 1860 8 In government EditMinister of Public Works Edit After Cavour s death king Victor Emmanuel II gave the task to form a new government firstly to Bettino Ricasoli and then to Urbano Rattazzi Rattazzi was the leader of the Left and created a cabinet composed by both political groups On 3 March 1862 Depretis was appointed Minister of Public Works and served as intermediary in arranging with Garibaldi 9 However in August 1862 the Royal Italian Army defeated Garibaldi s army of volunteers who were marching from Sicily towards Rome with the intent of annexing it into the Kingdom of Italy In the battle which took place a few kilometers from Gambarie Garibaldi was wounded and taken as prisoner Rattazzi s policy of repression towards Garibaldi at Aspromonte caused lot of public protests and the Prime Minister was forced to resign in September 1862 8 10 Moreover Francesco Crispi accused Depretis of having mounted the Mazzinian riots in Sarnico in May 1862 to discredit Garibaldi After the fall of the Rattazzi government therefore it was easy to predict the end of Depretis s political career when Crispi was elected leader of the Left 11 Depretis remained on the sidelines during the 8th legislature 1863 65 but he regularly participated in the parliamentary works intervening regarding the laws for administrative unification and declaring himself hostile to regionalism He was particularly active during the electoral campaign of 1865 and at the beginning of the 9th legislature he was elected Vice President of the Chamber of Deputies 12 Minister of Navy Edit In 1866 in anticipation of the war with the Austrian Empire after the signing of the Italo Prussian alliance Ricasoli was appointed Prime Minister by the king to replace General Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora who would lead the Italian troops during the war The king wanted to established a government of national conciliation that included members both form the Right and the Left Battle of Lissa in 1866 On 20 June Depretis was appointed Minister of the Navy 8 on the same day the Third Italian War of Independence began 13 After the Italian defeat in the Battle of Custoza Depretis insisted with admiral Carlo Persano on the attack against the island of Lissa as a revenge for Custoza But he also refused to give to admiral Persano detailed orders about the expedition in the Adriatic Sea against the fleet led by Wilhelm von Tegetthoff However the Italian Royal Navy was soundly defeated To quell the public outcry after the two defeats Depretis called for process Persano who was judged by the Italian Senate condemned for incompetence in 1867 and cashiered from duty 14 However the war ended in an Austrian defeat with Austria conceding the region of Venetia to Italy Italy s acquisition of this wealthy and populous territory represented a major step in the process of Italian unification 15 On 17 February 1867 Depretis resigned as Minister of the Navy His tenure as minister was quite controversial his apologists contend however that as an inexperienced civilian he could not have made sudden changes in naval arrangements without disorganizing the fleet and that in view of the impending hostilities he was obliged to accept the dispositions of his predecessors 8 Leader of the Left Edit Depretis during 1870s On 17 February 1867 Depretis was appointed Minister of Finance in the second cabinet of Ricasoli however after few months on 10 April Ricasoli resigned and Depretis returned to be a simple deputy Upon the death of Rattazzi in 1873 Depretis became leader of the Left On 25 June 1873 the conservative government of Giovanni Lanza fell beaten by a vote that saw the Depretis s moderate Left united with a large part of the Right no longer in support of the Minister of Finance Quintino Sella in fact Sella abandoned the proposal of a further fiscal tightening in order to achieve a balanced budget 16 Victor Emmanuel II then asked the conservative Marco Minghetti to form a new government inviting him to include also members from the Left Minghetti accepted the suggestion but his efforts to agree with Depretis were vain Minghetti and Sella were involved into an ambitious program of budget which needed a strong majority for which they tried to oblige the Independents to choose their side beginning to build a two party system as in the United Kingdom 17 However in the Italian non partisan political system hugely affected by localism and corruption their bet was equivalent to an all in that afterwards they lost 18 The 1874 election did not give to Minghetti the advantage he was hoping especially for the high support to Depretis s opposition in Southern Italy 19 Minghetti s government survived but the bipolarisation of the Parliament he had imposed strengthened the Left so that it could take the leadership of the country Two years later MPs from Tuscany became dissatisfied with the government after it refused to intervene in the financial problems of Florence The government was defeated on a vote on nationalising railways on 18 March 1876 and Minghetti was forced to resign 20 As a result Depretis became Prime Minister with 414 of the 508 MPs supporting the government 21 The fall of the Minghetti s cabinet was called by political commentators the parliamentary revolution 22 Prime Minister of Italy EditFirst term Edit Depretis first cabinet On 25 March 1876 Depretis sworn in as Prime Minister his cabinet was the first one to be composed only by members of the Left Prominent ministers were Giovanni Nicotera Pasquale Stanislao Mancini Michele Coppino Giuseppe Zanardelli and Benedetto Brin To strengthen his position Depretis called for new election in November 20 For the first time the left wing won an election gaining almost 70 of votes and taking 414 of the 508 seats of which 12 were extreme left wingers 20 As opposed to the previous right wing governments whose members were largely aristocrats representing rentiers from the north of the country and held moderate political views including loyalty to the crown and low government spending 23 the left wing government represented the bourgeoisie of the south of the country and supported low taxation secularism a strong foreign policy and public jobs 20 The main reform proposed by the government was the school one that took its name from Minister Coppino and was presented on 15 July 1877 The law introduced compulsory secular and free primary education for children aged six to nine On the other hand while maintaining the electoral promises Depretis raised the minimum exemption for the mobile wealth tax from 250 to 800 lire granting greater deductions for industrial income Important although not very effective was the decree of 25 August 1876 which regulated the office of the Prime Minister with the will to contain the monarchical power and above all the conflict of ministers The foreign policy of his first government was prudent similar to that of the cabinets which had preceded it His policies created criticisms from the progressives who were pushing for an approach to German Empire to fight France This francophobic attitude increased in May 1877 when the government of Albert de Broglie favorable to clericals positions sworn in Paris The government however had to face the violent attacks against the Minister of the Interior Nicotera who was considered guilty according to a part of the majority of abuses and illegality unable to cope with the crisis Depretis decided to resign in December 1877 The king gave again to Depretis the task of forming a new cabinet it was the last political act of the king who would die after few months Depretis failed in stopping the contrasts within the Left He was criticized for having abolished the Ministry of Agriculture Industry and Commerce and having established the Ministry of Treasury in order to achieve greater control over state budget On 11 March 1878 Depretis resigned from his office when his candidate lost the election to become President of the Chamber of Deputies the following cabinet was led by another prominent leftist member Benedetto Cairoli Second term Edit In November 1879 Depretis joined the Cairoli cabinet as Minister of the Interior In the same period a general irritation was caused by Cairoli and Count Corti s policy of clean hands at the Berlin Congress where Italy obtained nothing while Austria Hungary secured a European mandate to occupy Bosnia and Herzegovina A few months later the attempt of Giovanni Passannante to assassinate King Humbert I at Naples on 12 December 1878 caused Cairoli s downfall 8 Depretis was appointed Prime Minister by the king his cabinet was formed by members of the Left and of the Right On 24 June 1879 the Italian Senate approved with significant amendments the bill on the abolition of the tax on the mill However on 3 July the Chamber rejected the law and voted down the government third cabinet of Depretis therefore had to resign after only six months of troubled political life and the next government was again led by Cairoli on 14 July Third term Edit Agostino Depretis in 1885 Following the French occupation of Tunis on 11 May 1881 in view of popular indignation Cairoli resigned in order to avoid making inopportune declarations to the Chamber The king after the failed attempt by Quintino Sella to establish a new cabinet appointed Depretis once again Prime Minister On 20 May 1882 Depretis signed the Triple Alliance a secret military agreement between Italy Germany and Austria Hungary to oppose the power of France and Russia Italy sought support against France shortly after it lost North African ambitions to the French Each member promised mutual support in the event of an attack by any other great power The treaty provided that Germany and Austria Hungary were to assist Italy if it was attacked by France without provocation In turn Italy would assist Germany if attacked by France In the event of a war between Austria Hungary and Russia Italy promised to remain neutral In domestic policy 1882 saw the approval of the electoral reform of which Depretis had also become the main spokesman and on 22 January the parliament approved what the Prime Minister had called the only possible universal suffrage All men of at least 21 years of age who had attended at least the first two years of elementary school or who contributed an annual tax of no less than 19 80 lire were entitled to vote the voting age was lowered from 25 to 21 and the tax requirement lowered from 40 to 19 80 whilst men with three years of primary education were exempted from it 24 This resulted in the number of eligible voters increasing from 621 896 at the 1880 elections to 2 017 829 25 The electoral system was changed from one based on single member constituencies to one based on small multi member constituencies with between two and five seats 24 Voters had as many votes as there were candidates except in constituencies with five seats in which they were limited to four votes 26 To be elected in the first round a candidate needed an absolute majority of the votes cast and to receive a number of votes equivalent to at least one eighth of the number registered voters If a second round was required the number of candidates going through was double the number of seats available 26 In the 1882 general election the Left emerged as the largest in Parliament winning 289 of the 508 seats the Right arrived second with 147 seats 27 Depretis was confirmed Prime Minister by the king During his long tenure Depretis recomposed his cabinet four times first throwing out Giuseppe Zanardelli and Alfredo Baccarini in order to please the Right and subsequently bestowing portfolios upon Cesare Ricotti Magnani Robilant and other Conservatives so as to complete the political process known as Trasformismo 8 Depretis also completed the railway system and initiated colonial policy by the occupation of Massawa but at the same time he increased indirect taxation corrupted the parliamentary parties and by extravagance in public works impaired the stability of Italian finance 8 He argued that a wider suffrage would give citizens a moral dignity and sense of responsibility 28 Despite an insistent gout Depretis remained Prime Minister until his death More and more often he gathered the government in the living room of his house at Via Nazionale in Rome Transferred to Stradella due to the aggravation of the disease he died there on 29 July 1887 at 74 years old After the funeral he was buried in the cemetery of his home town He was replaced at the head of the Left and at the head of the government by Francesco Crispi Political ideology and legacy Edit A cartoon about Depretis accusing him of being a chameleonic politician Depretis was the founder and the main proponent of Trasformismo Transformism a method of making a flexible centrist coalition of government which isolated the extremes of the left and the right The process was initiated in 1883 when he moved to the right and reshuffled his government to include Marco Minghetti s conservatives This was a move Depretis had been considering for a while before 1883 The aim was to ensure a stable government that would avoid weakening the institutions by extreme shifts to the left or right Depretis felt that a secure government could ensure calm in Italy At this time middle class politicians were more concerned with making deals with each other and less about political philosophies and principles Large coalitions were formed with members being bribed to join them The liberals the main political group was tied together by informal gentleman s agreements but these were always in matters of enriching themselves Indeed actual governing did not seem to be happening at all but since only 2 million men had franchises most of these wealthy landowners did not have to concern themselves with such things as improving the lives of the people they were supposedly representing democratically However trasformismo fed into the debates that the Italian parliamentary system was weak and actually failing it ultimately became associated with corruption It was perceived as the sacrifice of principles and policies for short term gain The system of trasformismo was little loved and seemed to be creating a huge gap between Legal parliamentary and political Italy and Real Italy where the politicians became increasingly isolated This system brought almost no advantages illiteracy remained the same in 1912 as before the unification era and backward economic policies combined with poor sanitary conditions continued to prevent the country s rural areas from improving References Edit La dittatura parlamentare di Giolitti Killinger The history of Italy p 127 28 Agostino Depretis Dizionario Biografico Depretis Agostino pages 60 61 Il presidente del Consiglio in Illustrazione Italiana Anno XII N 47 22 November 1885 p 322 Raccolta degli atti del governo dittatoriale e prodittatoriale in Sicilia 1860 Stabilimento tipografico Francesco Lao Palermo a b Christopher Duggan 2000 Creare la nazione Vita di Francesco Crispi Laterza a b c d e f g One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Rattazzi Urbano Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 919 This work in turn cites Rattazzi Laetitia 1881 Rattazzi et son temps Paris King Bolton 1899 History of Italian Unity London Rines George Edwin ed 1920 Rattazzi Urbano Encyclopedia Americana Fulvio Cammarano Storia dell Italia liberale Roma Bari Laterza 2011 Christopher Duggan Creare la nazione Vita di Francesco Crispi Roma Bari Laterza 2000 Biografia di Agostino Depretis Il Risorgimento Enciclopedia Treccani Storia Militare n 215 Parma 2011 p 64 La Terza Guerra d Indipendenza Giancarlo Giordano Cilindri e feluche La politica estera dell Italia dopo l Unita Roma Aracne 2008 La Stampa Thursday 5 November 1874 La Stampa Sunday 8 November 1874 La Stampa Monday 16 November 1974 a b c d Nohlen amp Stover p1029 Flynn John T Pre Fascist Italy Tax and Borrow and Spend Mises Institute La rivoluzione parlamentare che segno la storia d Italia Nohlen amp Stover p1028 a b Nohlen amp Stover pp1029 1030 Nohlen amp Stover p1049 a b Nohlen amp Stover p1039 Nohlen amp Stover p1082 Frank J Coppa Planning protectionism and politics in liberal Italy economics and politics in the Giolittian age Catholic University of America Press 1971 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Agostino Depretis Discorsi parlamentari di Agostino Depretis Vol I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Agostino Depretis amp oldid 1128823431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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