Michele Bianchi
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Michele Bianchi | |
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Born | July 22, 1883 Belmonte Calabro, Italy |
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Died | February 3, 1930 (aged 46) |
Nationality | Italian |
Political party | National Fascist Party |
Michele Bianchi (July 22, 1883—February 3, 1930) was an eminent Italian revolutionary syndicalist leader. He was among the founding members of the Fascist movement.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Socialism
Bianchi was born in Belmonte Calabro (Calabria), in southern Italy.
He studied law at the University of Rome, and dedicated himself from early on to journalism. He became a member of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI), and editor of the Party newspaper Avanti!, presiding over the socialist branch in Rome. A delegate to the Bologna Congress in 1904, he backed the syndicalist line enforced by Arturo Labriola.
In 1905, Bianchi renounced his position at Avanti! and took over leadership of the Gioventù socialista (paper of the Federazione dei giovani socialisti - youth wing of the PSI). The antimilitarist campaign he led had him imprisoned, then forcibly settled in Genoa. Bianchi adapted to his new residence, and became head of the Ligurian Labor Chamber, as well as editor of the revolutionary paper Lotta socialista.
[edit] Syndicalism
In 1906, after backing several workers' riots, he expressed his pacifism in front of the PSI leadership, and was not universally welcomed. Transferred to Savona, he played a crucial part in the events that led the syndicalists out of the PSI - in between the PSI Bologna Congress of 1907 and the first Syndicalist Congress in July 1908 (in Ferrara).
After being arrested several times and travelling throughout Italy, Michele Bianchi became editor of La Scintilla in 1910; he launched the idea that PSI and syndicalists should reunite on electoral lists for the expected administrative elections. He was outvoted, and resorted to expressing his views solely through the paper - which he turned into a daily, the backer of several local proletarian revolts in 1911.
He was however forced by the tight budget to shut down La Scintilla, not before he was yet again arrested in Trieste for attacking Giovanni Giolitti as instigator of the Italo-Turkish War. He benefited from an amnesty and returned to Ferrara, where he created and headed the paper La Battaglia (a failed attempt to gain a seat in the elections of 1913). Bianchi moved to Milan, becoming a major figure of the Milanese Syndical Union and the Unione Sindacale Italiana (USI).
[edit] Fascism
Michele Bianchi's attitude during World War I mirrored that of Benito Mussolini: he became an active supporter of Italy's entry into the conflict, and advocate of irredentism. In 1915, when Italy joined the Entente Powers, he volunteered for service and became a junior officer - first in the Infantry, then in the Artillery. With the end of the war, Bianchi joined Mussolini's Fasci italiani di combattimento, and then the National Fascist Party (PNF). In 1921, he became the PNF secretary, and attempted to join the Fascists with other right-wing movements (while authorizing the numerous violent raids carried out by the Blackshirts).
After stomping out a strike action against Fascist maneuvers, Bianchi was one of the Quattuorvirate who led the March on Rome, the pseudo-coup d'état that brought Mussolini as Prime Minister (October 1922). In the newly-formed government, he was general secretary of Internal Affairs. In short time, Bianchi was dismissed as PNF leader in 1923, while joining the Grand Council of Fascism; in 1924, he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, but resigned from his government position on March 14.
In 1925, he was given the position of undersecretary at the Ministry of Public Works, in 1928 the same position at the Internal Affairs one, and on September 12, 1929 he became Minister of Public Works. Again elected to the Chamber, his health severely worsened and he died soon after in Rome.