He was a founding member of the Communist Party of Italy (PCd'I, later PCI) and, after Gramsci was jailed by Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime, he became the senior leader of the PCd'I until his death, for which he also directed Il Comunista.
In 1935, under the nom de guerre Ercole Ercoli, he was named member of the secretariat of the Comintern. In Spain in 1937, during the Civil War, he willingly contributed to the elimination of anarchists by the Catalan Communist leaders (carried out on the orders of Joseph Stalin). In 1939 he was arrested in France: released, he moved to the Soviet Union and, remained there during World War II, broadcasting radio messages to Italy, in which he called for resistance to Nazi Germany and the Italian Social Republic.
After having been minister without portfolio in the Pietro Badoglio government, he acted as vice-premier under Alcide De Gasperi in 1945. In opposition with the dominant line in his own party, he voted for the including of the Lateran Pacts in the Italian Constitution. In 1948, Togliatti led the PCI in the first Italian election after World War II. He lost to Christian Democracy after a violent campaign in which the United States, viewing him as a Cold War enemy, played a large part (see Italian general election, 1948).
On July 14 of the same year he was shot three times, being severely wounded — his life hung in the balance for days and news about his condition was uncertain, causing an acute political crisis in Italy (which included a general strike called by the Italian General Confederation of Labour).
In 1953, he fought against the so-called "cheat or swindle law", an electoral one voted by the Christian Democracy-led majority of the time, which aimed at using first past the post to augment the center-right's power. Ultimately, the law was to prove of no use for the government in the elections of that year, which won Togliatti's PCI 22.6% of the vote; it was repealed in November of 1953.
Despite his allegedly tight relationship with Soviet Union, Togliatti's leadership remained unscathed after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution (which was everywhere else a cause for major conflicts within the left). He coined the development of the polycentrism theory (unity in diversity within the communist parties in all countries). In the 1958 elections, the number of Communist votes was still on the rise. In the 1963 elections, the PCI gained 25.2% of the votes, but again failed to reach a relative majority.
The Russian city of Stavropol-on-Volga, where Togliatti had been instrumental in establishing the AutoVAZ (Lada) automobile manufacturing plant in collaboration with Fiat, was renamed Tolyatti in his honor in 1964, after his death.
He has been also criticized for his alternate relations with the maverick Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito, which were considered to be closely following the party line dictated from the Kremlin.
The same has been said of Togliatti's judgement of Stalin's policies: after the communist leader's death in 1953, he had stated that "Joseph Stalin is a titan of thought. His name is to be given to an entire century...". Later on, in 1956, after the de-Stalinization process, he had declared that: "Stalin has disseminated false and exaggerated theses, and was victim of an almost desperate perspective of endless persecution". In the following year, Togliatti repeatedly stated that he had been unaware of Stalin's crimes. The "Italian road to Socialism" he propounded from that moment moved the Italian Communist Party to more democratic and independent positions, which would lead to events such as the PCI's condemnation of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in a famous speech given by Enrico Berlinguer in Moscow.
Despite such contradictions, Togliatti is widely ranked among the creators of Republican Italy and of its Constitution. He always strove for a certain collaboration with the other main party of Italy, Christian Democracy, and, while still recovering from his wounds in 1948, he had invited the rioting workers to respect the democratic institutions of the country.
1893 births | 1964 deaths | Comintern people | Members of the Italian Communist Party | Members of the Italian Socialist Party | Natives of Genoa | Spanish Civil War people
بالميرو تولياتي | Palmiro Togliatti | Palmiro Togliatti | Palmiro Togliatti | פלמירו טוליאטי | Palmiro Togliatti | パルミーロ・トリアッティ | Palmiro Togliatti | Palmiro Togliatti | Palmiro Togliatti | Тольятти, Пальмиро
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