Giuseppe Di Vittorio (11 August 1892 – 3 November 1957), also known as Mario Nicoletti, was an Italian trade union leader and communist politician. He was one of the most influential trade union leaders of the labour movement after World War I. He became president of the World Federation of Trade Unions.
Giuseppe Di Vittorio (11 August 1892 – 3 November 1957), also known as Mario Nicoletti, was an Italian trade union leader and communist politician.
He was one of the most influential trade union leaders of the labour movement after World War I. He became president of the World Federation of Trade Unions.
0 comentarii0 vizualizări0 reacții
Giuseppe Di Vittorioa adăugat o fotografie
acum 5 ore
R.I.P Giuseppe
Early life Giuseppe Di Vittorio was born in Cerignola, Apulia, into a family of poor agricultural day laborers. After his father's death, Di Vittorio was forced to leave school and work as a day laborer. He joined the May 1904 general strike during which five workers were killed by troops in Cerignola. Di Vittorio was strongly influenced by the growth of peasants' organizations and the spread of socialist ideas, giving rise to his participation in the local young socialist organization in Cerignola. He was radicalised by affiliating with the national Federazione Giovanile Socialista (Federation of Young Socialists), led by syndicalists in opposition to the official youth federation of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). His involvement in the socialist and labour movement grew, and 1911 became chairman of the Camera del Lavoro in Minervino Murge. As a native of the Mezzogiorno, Di Vittorio became involved in the union plans for solving the region's acute problems in the manner illustrated by the Fasci Siciliani (Sicilian Workers Leagues) in the final decade of the 19th century. A partisan of insurgence, Di Vittorio became a leader of an anarcho-syndicalist Unione Sindacale Italiana (USI), after its formation in 1912. After the Red Week, a number…
0 comentarii0 vizualizări0 reacții
Giuseppe Di Vittorioa adăugat o fotografie
acum 5 ore
R.I.P Giuseppe
Opposition to fascism In the 1921 Italian general election, Di Vittorio was elected to Parliament in the lists of the PSI. For the 1924 Italian general election, he joined the Communist Party of Italy (PCdI) but failed to be re-elected. Di Vittorio was also a member of the militant anti-fascist organisation Arditi del Popolo. The new situation after the rise to power of fascism and the March on Rome made him an enemy of Benito Mussolini's regime. In May 1927, he was sentenced in absentia to twelve years of imprisonment for subversive propaganda by the Special Tribunal for the Defense of the State. He managed to flee to France, and later lived in the Soviet Union from 1928 to 1930, where he represented the dissolved General Confederation of Labour in the Profintern, as well as being Italy's representative in the Krestintern. Afterwards, he returned to Paris, where he was a member of the Politburo of the Italian Communist Party. Di Vittorio joined the Republican side fighting Francisco Franco's forces during the Spanish Civil War, he was Political Commissar of the XI International Brigade. After the fall of the Republic, he headed the board of a Paris-based antifascist newspaper, La Voce…
0 comentarii0 vizualizări0 reacții
Giuseppe Di Vittorioa lăsat un gând
acum 5 ore
Post-war years In 1944, Di Vittorio, along with socialist and Catholic union leaders, agreed to re-establish CGIL as a representative of all currents of trade unionism in Italy, including communists, socialists, Christian democrats, and anarcho-syndicalists. He was elected union secretary the following year. As a union representative, Di Vittorio sat on the National Council, an advisory body created to fulfill the role of a provisional legislature from September 1945 to June 1946. In the 1946 Italian general election, he was elected to the Constituent Assembly as a member of the Italian Communist Party (PCI), and would later be re-elected as a member of the new Parliament in the 1948 and 1957 Italian general elections. With the onset of the Cold War and the breakdown of the alliance between the main anti-fascist parties, particularly Christian Democracy (DC) and the Italian Communist Party, the organisation suffered internal divisions. When a right-wing student attempted to assassinate the PCI leader Palmiro Togliatti in July 1948, CGIL called a general strike and organised street protests during which widespread rioting occurred. After this event, those affiliated with the Christian Democrats within the union left to establish the Confederazione Italiana Sindacati Lavoratori (CISL). They were followed in…