Communist Party of Italy

Communist Party of Italy

The Communist Party of Italy (Partito Comunista d’Italia, PCd'I) was a communist political party in Italy which existed from 1921 to 1926. That year it was outlawed by Benito Mussolini's fascist regime. In 1943, the name was changed to the Italian Communist Party.

Contents

Foundation

The forerunner of the party was the Communist Faction which began in 1912. The Communist Faction was part of the Communist International, commonly known as the Comintern.

The Communist Party of Italy was founded in Livorno on 21 January 1921, following a split in the Italian Socialist Party on their 17th congress. The split occurred after the socialist Congress of Livorno refused to expel the reformist group as required by the Comintern. The L'Ordine Nuovo group in Turin led by Antonio Gramsci and the "culturalist" current led by Angelo Tasca joined the Communist Faction in the new party.

Name

Detail of the first membership card of PCd'I,1921.

The Comintern, at that time, was structured as a single world party according to Vladimir Lenin's vision. Therefore, its official name was the Communist Party of Italy, Section of the Communist International. This official name remained until 1943 when Communist International was dropped, and the party simply became the Italian Communist Party (Partito Comunista Italiano, or PCI).

This change was not surprising as PCI started being used as the party's acronym around 1924–1925. This name change also reflected a change in the Comintern's role: it increasingly became a federation of national Communist parties. This trend accelerated after Lenin’s death. The Italian Communist party's new name emphasized the party's shifting from an international focus to an Italian one. At the time, it was a hotly-contested issue for the two major factions of the party. On one side, the Leninist preferred the single world party as it was internationalist and strongly centralized; on the other side, the Italians wanted a party more tailored to their nation's peculiarities and wanted more autonomy.

Program

The PCI, being a territorial section of the Comintern, adopted the same program, the same conception of the party and the same tactics adopted by the II Congress in Moscow of 1920. The official program, drawn up in 10 points, began with the intrinsically catastrophic nature of the Capitalist System and terminated with the extinction of the State. It follows in a synthetic way the model outlined by Lenin for the Russian party.

For a while, this identity resisted, but the fast progress of the reaction in Europe produced a change of tactics in a democratic direction within the Russian party and consequently within the Comintern. This happened in particular regarding the possibility, previously opposed, of an alliance with the social democratic and bourgeois parties. This provoked a tension in the party between the majority (Left) and the minority currents (in 1924: 16% the Right and 11% the Center)[citation needed] supported by the Comintern. The proposals of the left were no longer accepted and the conflict became irremediable.

New concept of party

Since its formation, the PCI strived to organize itself on some bases which were not a mere reproduction of the traditional parties’ bases. Then it took again some arguments that distinguished the battle within the PSI: it is necessary to form an environment fiercely hostile to bourgeois society and that is an anticipation of the future socialist society. The purpose of this is not Utopian, because already in this society, especially in production, some structures are born on future results.

In two articles of 1921, this concept was developed so deeply that they assert that the vanguard party is not a simple part of the proletarian class but already a structure beyond the classes, already fitted to the classless society and designed in accordance with its future duties. Revolution is not a problem of organizational shape, but of strength; revolution cannot be "done" (infantile and unrealistic goals) but led (praxis’ overthrow). From the organizational point of view, the party should abandon elective democracy, internal hierarchies, etc., and work "organically", that is like a biological organism, where the single parts or cells and different organs work together for the whole.

In the first years of the PCI, there was no official leader, but the accepted leader, first of the Faction and then of the party, was Amadeo Bordiga of the Left current. Leaders of the minority currents were Angelo Tasca (Right) and Antonio Gramsci (Center).

Structure

In 1922 during its second congress, the new party registered 43,000 members. This was in part due to the entrance of almost the whole Socialist Youth Federation (Federazione Giovanile Socialista). The party adopted a slim structure headed by a Central Committee of 15 members, five of whom were in the Executive committee as well:

Tasca’s current was not represented, while Gramsci was the only representative of the Center (the other representative of Ordine Nuovo was, at the time, aligned with the Left).

The national structure included provincial federations, local sections, union groups and a clandestine organization for the fight against the armed fascist groups, the Ufficio Primo. According to the report of the Central Committee to the second congress, during the polls in the Unions (Camera del Lavoro) the communist motions received 600,000 votes.

Bolshevization

In 1923, some members of the party were arrested and put on trial for "conspiracy against the State". This allowed the intense activity of the Communist International to deprive the party's left wing of authority and give control of the party to the minority center which had aligned with the position of Moscow.

In 1924-25, the Comintern began the campaign of "Bolshevization" which forced every party to conform itself to the discipline and orders of Moscow. In May 1924, during the clandestine conference in Como held to ratify the party leadership. of the 45 secretaries of sections, 35 more the Youth Federation’s one vote for Bordiga’s Left, 4 for Gramsci’s Centre and 5 for Tasca’s Right.[clarification needed]

In 1926, before the Llyon Congress, the Center won almost all the votes due to the absence of most of the members of the Left delegates who were unable to attend because of the fascist controls and the lack of support of the Comintern (clandestine movements[clarification needed]). A recourse to the Comintern against the evident maneuver had no effect.

The PCd’I, as conceived by the Sinistra Comunista (Communist Left), terminated. The organization continued with the support of the Communist International and a new structure and a new leading group. In 1922, the newspaper L'Ordine Nuovo was closed, and in 1924 the new central newspaper L'Unità, directed by Gramsci, was started. The Communist Left continued as a fraction principally functioning in exile. It published the newspaper Bilan, the Monthly Theoretical Bulletin of the Italian Fraction of the Communist left.

In 1926, Bordiga and Gramsci were arrested and imprisoned on the island of Ustica. In 1927, Palmiro Togliatti was elected secretary in the place of Gramsci, who was imprisoned. In 1930, Bordiga was expelled from the CI, accused of “Trotskyism”.

In 1943, Stalin dissolved the Communist International, and the exiled members of the PCd’I in Moscow on 15 May changed the party's name to Italian Communist Party (Partito Comunista Italiano, PCI). With this name, it reorganized in Italy and after the fall of Fascism became a parliamentary party.

Publications

Central newspapers of PCd'I:

  • Rassegna comunista
  • Il comunista'
  • L'Ordine Nuovo
  • Il sindacato rosso
  • Lo Stato operaio
  • La Compagna
  • L'Avanguardia
  • Prometeo (since 1924)
  • L'Unità (since 1924)

Regional newspapers of PCd'I:

References

  • La nascita del Partito Comunista d'Italia (Livorno 1921), ed. L'Internazionale, Milano 1981.
  • La lotta del Partito Comunista d'Italia (Strategia e tattica della rivoluzione, 1921–1922), ed. L'Internazionale, Milano 1984.
  • Il partito decapitato (La sostituzione del gruppo dirigente del P.C.d'It., 1923–24), L'Internazionale, Milano 1988.
  • La liquidazione della sinistra del P.C.d'It. (1925), L'Internazionale, Milano 1991.
  • Partito Comunista d'Italia, Secondo Congresso Nazionale - Relazione del CC, Reprint Feltrinelli, 1922, .
  • Paolo Spriano, Storia del Partito Comunista Italiano, vol. I Da Bordiga a Gramsci, Einaudi, 1967.
  • Franco Livorsi, Amadeo Bordiga, Editori Riuniti, 1976.
  • Le origini del PCI by Luigi Cortesi, Laterza 1972.

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