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Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
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ON THE CONSTITUTIONAL ORDER IN/OF ITALIAN FASCISM
Pedro Velez
pedrorbavelez@hotmail.com
Law degree from the Law Faculty of the University Nova de Lisboa/FDUNL. Doctorate in Law
from the FDUNL (Portugal), specialising in Political Science (thesis title: Constitution and
transcendence: the case of communitarian regimes of the interwar). In recent years, he has been
dedicated to research and the teaching of public law disciplines (Introduction to Public Law,
Constitutional Law, Constitutional Portuguese Law, Administrative Law) at the Law School of the
Catholic University of Porto-Portugal, the FDUNL and the European University. He has also taught
(FDUNL) histo-judicial disciplines History of (Portuguese) Institutions; History of the State in
co-regency with Professor Diogo Freitas do Amaral. Areas of interest include: historical types of
State, political forms, political regimes/forms of government and systems of government,
constitutionalism and relations between the politico-constitutional and religious.
Abstract
In this article we will analyse the fascist regime as a politico-constitutional reality. From a new
way of looking at politico-constitutional phenomena, we will interpret them as inscribed on
religious grounds.
We seek to show that the fascist regime was characterised as having identified the political
community as Absolute. It suggests that it appears to constitute a different case in a generic
politico-constitutional family of regimes that are characterised as making the political
community a supreme good.
Keywords
Fascism; Constitution; Religion; Authoritarianism; Totalitarianism
How to cite this article
Velez, Pedro (2016). "On the constitutional order in/of Italian fascism". JANUS.NET e-journal
of International Relations, Vol. 7, . 2, November 2016-April 2017. Consulted [online] on
the date of last consultation, observare.autonoma.pt/janus.net/en_vol7_n2_art5
(http://hdl.handle.net/11144/2784)
Article received on April 5, 2016 and accepted for publication on September 17, 2016
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 7, Nº. 2 (November 2016-April 2017), pp. 64-89
On the constitutional order in/of Italian fascism
Pedro Velez
65
ON THE CONSTITUTIONAL ORDER IN/OF ITALIAN FASCISM
1
Pedro Velez
In this article, we examine the fascist regime as a politico-constitutional phenomenon
2
.
We will do it from a new way of looking at the politico-constitutional, a way that not only
sticks to forms or institutions, or is limited only to probing a favourable or decisive socio-
political occasion; or is the "capture" of an axiological materiality "founder" of low
intensity ("too human", so to speak) the certainly "real" and important moments of the
constitutional. We seek to reattach the theoretical and constitutional project of the
famous German constitutionalist Carl Schmitt through research on identities, parallels
and cross-fertilisation between the "politico-judicial" or, more specifically, "the politico-
constitutional" and the "religious"
3
.
Conjecture about "the politico-constitutional" as an axiophonic reality;
from the Summum Bonum as an invariant of the politico-constitutional
In this study we take as a starting point a concrete hypothesis from the reading of
politico-constitutional phenomena. It would also be illusory, as has been stressed by
phenomenology in general, to pretend that such a thing as a pure constitutional
description from a "given" can exist.
1
The translation of this article was funded by national funds through FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e
a Tecnologia - as part of OBSERVARE project with the reference UID/CPO/04155/2013, with the aim of
publishing Janus.net. Text translated by Thomas Rickard.
2
About fascist regime, see in the most recent national literature: António Costa Pinto O Regime Fascista
Italiano, in Fernando Rosas and Pedro Aires Oliveira (coord.), As Ditaduras Contemporâneas , Colibri
editions, 2006, pp. 27 to 36; Diogo Freitas do Amaral, História do Pensamento Político Ocidental, Almedina,
Coimbra, 2011, pp. 499 ff. ( anti-communist and fascist state dictatorship ), and Uma Introdução à Política
Bertrand Editora, Lisboa, 2014, 83-85; Jaime Nogueira Pinto, Ideologia e Razão de Estado: uma história
do poder, Civilization Publisher, 3rd ed., Porto, 2012, chapter xi o Fascismo: Ideologia e Conquista do
Estado). In the jus-constitutionalist doctrine, see Jorge Bacelar Gouveia, Constitutional Law Manual -
Volume I, Almedina, Coimbra, 5th Edition, 2013, pp. 204-207 and Jorge Miranda, Manual de Direito
Constitucional - Tomo I - Preliminares - O Estado e os Sistemas Constitucionais, 7th edition, Coimbra
Editora, Coimbra, 2003, pp. 213 ff. On the judico-constitutional systems of the interwar usually categorised
as “right-wing non-democratic regimes", especially Brazil’s regime post-1937, see Pedro Velez, Constituição
e Transcendência: os casos dos regimes comunitários do entre-guerras, doctoral thesis, Lisbon, FDUNL,
2013. For this politico-constitutional temporality, see: António Manuel Spain in Os modelos jurídicos do
liberalismo, do fascismo e do Estado social: Continuidades e rupturas, in Análise Social, Vol. XXXVII, No.
165, 2003, pp. 1285-1302 and Diogo Freitas do Amaral Corporativismo, Fascismos e Constituição in
Fernando Rosas, Álvaro Garrido (Coord.) Corporativismos, Fascismos, Estado Novo, Almedina, Coimbra,
2012, pp. 81-98.
3
Vide Carl Schmitt, Political Theology: Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty, MIT Press, Cambridge,
Massachusetts/London, England, 1985 (1922/1934) and Carl Schmitt, Political Theology II, The Myth of the
Closure of any Political Theology, Polity, Cambridge, 2008 (1970).
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In the interpretation of constitutional forms of existence, we will assume that such forms
are structured as identifications of something supremely/maximally valuable/normative,
from a Summum Bonum (a supreme good); or, in more a subjectivist way, we suppurate
that thought or constitutional imagination that drives an axiological/normative
intentionality to a quid taken as a supreme good. This means that we interpret the
politico-constitutional phenomena ultimately as religious "choices" or "decisions", given
the common belief that the "election" of a Summum Bonum is a characteristic of religious
behaviour
4
.
The formulation of such a possibility of politico-constitutional reading has not appeared,
as to its fundamental orientation, ex nihil.
Re-viewing as extracting new developments of usual ways of looking at the constitutional
order is the maxime of modes that comprise a form of public things and material-
axiological realities: who says form can mean the end (and, therefore, the identification
of a good)? Who says axiology can say axiophone (identification of a supreme good)
5
? It
does indeed, following seminal attempts of (politico-)judicial and judicio-constitutional
interpretation that seem to go in this direction
6
.
In the chalk of this possibility of reading the classic understanding of the politico-
constitutional classic separates, in which political "phenomena" are precisely identified,
compared and differentiated as interpretations of the Supreme Good. In the frameworks
of classical philosophy, human behaviour is, in fact, generally seen as a behaviour that
seeks the highest good for humans Summum Bonum
7
.
The idea that individual and collective human "behaviour" always expresses an
intentionality from religious order directed to a Supreme Good has been explicitly
thematised in the universe of contemporary philosophy. We especially present the
thought of Max Scheler and Eric Voegelin.
In Max Scheler we find a description of human action as informed by a fundamental
valuation directed to a supreme good/value that is intrinsically religious
8
. In The Political
Religions (1938/1939), but also in later writings, Eric Voegelin suggests that personal
and socio-political existence philosophico-political or theologico-political thought
systems are organised in light of something (religiously) "experienced" as highly real
and valuable (Realissimum/Summum Bonum)
9
. These authors took up the thoughts of
4
On identification of a centre of axiological superlativity, separating the "sacred" from the "profane" as
characteristic of religious behaviour, vide Mircea Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion,
A Harvest Book, Harcourt Brace & World. Inc., New York, 1987.
5
We are thinking, above all, about the theory of "constitution materially” drawn up by Costantino Mortati in
La Costituzione in Sense Materiale, Giuffrè Editore, Milan, 1940.
6
vide Eric Voegelin, A Natureza do Direito e outros textos jurídicos, Portuguese version with a foreword by
Adelino Maltez, Veja, Lisbon, 1998.
7
Varrão (116 BC - 27 BC), in De Philosophia, he would classify the various philosophical schools according
to the conceptions of the Supreme Good for human beings by those conveyed - vide Alasdair MacIntyre,
God, Philosophy, Universities, A Selective History of the Catholic Philosophical Tradition, Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, Inc., Lanham, Boulder, New York, 2009, p 30. In our times, some contemporary
authors have sought to recalculate the classical heritage. One can observe a revival of the idea that human
worlds are like the determinations of Good (think, for example, Leo Strauss, Alasdair MacIntyre and Charles
Taylor).
8
Max Scheler, On the Eternal in Man, with an Introduction by Graham McAleer Transaction Publishers, New
Brunswick, NJ, 2009.
9
Cf. Eric Voegelin, The Political Religions, in Eric Voegelin, Collected Works, vol. 5, Modernity without
Restraint: The Political Religions, the New Science of Politics, and Science, Politics, and Gnosticism,
University of Missouri Press, Columbia, MO, 2000, p. 32. See also, for example: The New Science of Politics
in Eric Voegelin, Collected Works, vol. 5., Modernity without Restraint... Cit., maxime p. 235, 236;
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Augustine, whereby human behaviour would always be informed by a love or
fundamental desire directed to a certain quid, God or an idol
10
.
Note, however, that the use of the Summum Bonum concept does not necessarily refer
here to something more than a formal existential and phenomenological "structural
place" (a soft ontological dimension, if you want) and is susceptible to obtaining
different directions. Reaping inspiration elsewhere, we admit that the "politico-
constitutional transcendental" Supreme Good can be determined in terms of intensity
and different "axiophonic" coverages. Therefore: the Supreme Good can or cannot be
interpreted as the sole, exclusive, unlimited, unconditional source of all normativity/
values/axiological and normative authority, like an Absolute
11
.
This form of politico-constitutional forms could eventually be erected as the substance of
a form of life or a universal and civilizational order. It has been present here at the
opening of this sub-hypothesis, the fact that the capacity/potential to generate a way of
life, or at least a comprehensive axiology, is, often, considered a characteristic of the
religious. According to Habermas, for example:
"[A]ll religion is originally a ‘world view’ or a ‘comprehensive
doctrine’ in the sense that it arrogates to itself the authority to
structure a way of life in its totality"
12
.
J. Rawls pointed out that
"many religious and philosophical doctrines aspire to be both
general and comprehensive”
13
.
Additional "paths" of the politico-constitutional
In addition to the hypothesis and conjecture that have just been substantiated, this work
further explores prolonging the fundamental analytical record that underlies such a
hypothesis certain paths where the politico-constitutional inscribes itself.
Necessary Moral Bases for Communication in a Democracy (1956), in Collected Works, vol. 7, Published
Essays, 1953-1965, University of Missouri Press, Columbia, MO/London, 2000, pp. 55-57.
10
James Smith KA, Introducing Radical Orthodoxy, Mapping the Post-Secular Theology Baker Academic,
Grand Rapids, Michigan/Paternoster Press, Milton Keyes, UK: 2004, pp. 113 to 116. S. Augustine, Of True
Religion in JHS Burleigh (ed. and trans.) Saint Augustine Earlier Writings, Westminster John Knox Press,
Louisville, Kentucky, 2006. On the influence of St. Augustine in Scheler and Voegelin (and the influence of
Scheler on Voegelin) see William Petropulos, The Person as Imago Dei: Augustine and Max Scheler in Eric
Voegelin’s Herrschaftslehre and The Political Religions, in "Glenn Hughes (ed.), The Politics of the Soul: Eric
Voegelin on Religious Experience, Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, MD, 1999, pp. 87-114.
11
The idealist philosopher José Antonio de Brito could suggest that political regimes, or at least some of them,
are declensions of what is seen by its founders and protagonists as an Absolute. The question of whether
modernity can truly do without the Absolute "category" was put together by Hannah Arendt; see: Hannah
Arendt, Authority in the Twentieth Century, in The Review of Politics, Vol. 18, No. 4, 1956, pp. 403-417 and
Samuel Moyn, Hannah Arendt on the Secular, in New German Critique, Vol 35, No 3105, 2008, pp. 71-96.
12
Jürgen Habermas, On the Relations Between the Liberal Secular State and Religion, in Vries Hent, Political
theologies, Public Religions in a Post-Secular World Fordham University Press, New York, 2006, p. 259.
13
John Rawls, Political Liberalism, Columbia University Press, New York, Chichester, West Sussex, 1996: 13.
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In the work of Schmitt we find the idea that the modern "construction of order" is done
by lifting immanent/inner-worldly/earthly objects to "idol" status
14
. In this study, beyond
this, we will not present another intuition of Schmitt, according to which the modern
politicio-constitutional can only be understood as a place of res mixtae i.e. of mixed
things like a decision ("negotiation") on the borders between modern politics and the
"religio-traditional"
15
.
He also saw German jurisprudent, which is usually considered the par excellence of
religious discourse (and in particular Christianity), as a phenomenon in the world that
could not fail to have a politico-constitutional translation. In the science of today's
constitutional rights we think, for example, of the work of Spanish constitutionalist and
political philosopher Miguel Ayuso going beyond this intuition, Christianity has been
"rediscovered", the maxime of Catholicism, as a politico-constitutional tradition. It is a
politico-constitutional tradition that "postulates" a politico-constitutional order to an
axiology and a previous transcendent normativity, outside and superior to the politico-
constitutional (and more specifically the definition of an order that recognises a specific
Catholic foundation and is structured as a non-monistic and respectful order of "social
sovereignties")
16
. We will consider in the analysis a maxime element when we ascertain
nature and "measure" the intensity of "axiophonic investments" underling the politico-
constitutional phenomena. Here we consider whether the politico-constitutional
understanding conveyed by this tradition will qualify some of these investments.
Object and method
Viewing the essence of the politico-constitutional that leaves from the in concreto, the
object is to identify and differentiate industriously forms of political existence.
In the wake of theories of material constitution, the judicio-constitutional in the
conventional sense, the judicio-constitutional instruments in one (conventionally
regarded) strict sense (formal constitutions) or equivalent realities (fundamental laws,
for example), as well as their genetic processes processes of constitutionalisation,
fundamental processes forms of public things that renew will be considered as instances
of fundamental "axiophonic" decisions, or more specifically, Summa Bona choices.
In this work, the use of historical background will be instrumental and ancillary in relation
to the interpretation or the theoretico-judicial and constitutional reconstruction that we
propose to undertake. The use of history will help the development of a legal method
with a special teleological and theologico-political orientation, which will be dictated by
this same development.
We adopt an advanced analytical framework not only because it seems the most apt
method to capture the "deep structure" of the constitutional phenomena in general, but
because looking at "right-wing non-democratic regimes" of the inter-war period from a
form that will increase the analytical capacity available for them to come to light.
14
Carl Schmitt, Politische Romantik, Dunker & Humbolt, Berlin, 1968, p. 23.
15
vide the aforementioned Political Theology II Cit.
16
About this politico-constitutional issue and theologico-political view, see: Miguel Ayuso, La constitución
cristiana de los Estados, Ediciones Scire, Barcelona, 2008.
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We then begin our journey through the fascist vinténio (its twenty years of rule) and
its terminal Republican sequel.
Favourable occasion
In the post-First World War era, Italy was defined as a Nation-State, but organisationally,
legally and "spiritually" it seemed incomplete.
The liberal order, an order that lacked support in a parliamentary tradition or even a true
governing class, was in a process of democratisation. Under the political activation of the
masses and their management (i.e. state institutions), the maxime of parliamentary
institutions were blocked, generating a crisis of governability
17
. According to much of the
coeval Italian publicists, the State was unable to cope with the explosion of outbreaks of
power and alternative privatist politicality, centrifugal and dissolving of the social order,
and Italy had become no State. The "modern state crisis", coined by the jurist Santi
Roman, was a widespread expression in the inter-wars period
18
.
In such a scenario, a new mass movement emerges that evokes the “New State”,
constructed from the idea of Nation - the fascist movement
19
.
The fascist movement was co-opted by a part of the establishment as "a new state to
sustain the State”
20
. On 31st October 1922, the leader of the fascist movement Benito
Mussolini is made President of the Council of Ministers. This was the fascist "National
Revolution"
21
.
Reconstitution and hypostatisation of the State. The cancellation of
social sovereignty and building an integrated/integrating mono-archical
political organisation
The so-called fascist vinténio was increasingly seen as a sperimento costituzionale”
22
.
Following the interpretation of the architect of its fundamental matrix, from Guardasigilli
17
A law of June 30, 1912 would institute an almost universal suffrage. In 1919, the electoral system would
be based on a proportional representation principle.
18
View Aldo Sandulli, Santi Romano, Orlando, Ranelleti and Donati sull' "eclissi dello Stato". Sei Scritti di inizio
secolo XX, in Rivista di diritto pubblico trimestrale No. 1, 2006, pp. 77-97. E. Laclau and Zac did not fail to
point out social disorganisation in Italy during the 1920s in et pour cause. Fascism presented and established
itself as embodying "the abstract principle of the social order as such” - apud Benjamin Arditi, Politics on
the edges of liberalism: difference, populism, revolution, agitation, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh,
2007, p. 27.
19
See Emilio Gentile, Il mito dello Stato nuovo , Editori Laterza, Rome-Bari 1999.
20
To use formulations from a contemporary description of Eric Voegelin.
21
Regarding the occasio do regime fascista vide: Alexander De Grand, The Hunchback's Tailor Giovanni Giolitti
and Liberal Italy from the Challenge of Mass Politics to the Rise of Fascism, 1882-1922, Praeger, Westport,
Connecticut / London, 2001; Marco Tarchi, Italy: Early Crisis and Fascist Takeover, in Dirk Berg-Schlosser
and Jeremy Mitchell (eds.), Conditions of Democracy in Europe 1919-39, Systematic Case Studies, Palgrave
Macmillan, Houndmills / London, 2000, pp. 294-320.
22
vide Enzo Fimiani, Fascism and tra regime Meccanismi statutari and "costituzione materiale" in M. Palla
(dir.) Lo Stato fascist, La Nuova Italia-Rcs, Firenze, 2001, p. 79-176. About the institutions of the fascist
“regime”, maxime on the constitutional transformation processes that took place in the vinténio, vide :
Livio Paladin, Fascism (diritto costituzionale), in Encyclopaedia del Diritto, vol. XVI, Giuffrè Editore, Milan,
1967, pp. 887-901; S. Labriola, la costituzione authoritarian in S. Labriola, Storia della Italian costituzione,
Esi, Napoli 1995, pp. 203-274; Alberto Aquarone, L'organizzazione dello Stato totalitario , 2nd ed., Einaudi,
Torino 2002. Also, see Renzo de Felice, Brève histoire du fascisme, trad. Éditions Audibert , Paris, 2002;
Philip Morgan, Italian Fascism 1915-1945, 2nd ed., Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills / New York, 2004,
chap. 3; John Pollard, The Fascist Experience in Italy , Routledge, London / New York 1998/2005, chaps.
3 and 4. For a consultation with legal and formal instruments which established a fascist constitutional
building vide Alberto Aquarone, L'organizzazione dello Stato totalitario Cit., Pp. 315 ff. ["appendice”];
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[Minister of Justice] dela Revoluzione” and jurist of fascism Alfredo Rocco, interpretation
of the so-called fascistissimi constitutionalists (Sergio Panunzio and Carlo Costamagna)
developed. This process can be seen as attempting to build an order that, while
integrating a mono-archical organisation of the social in the political, could update the
idea of State
23
.
In January 1925 in parliament Mussolini announced the opening of a new politico-
constitutional era. From that time, the fascist government effectively ceased to be a
"normal government" and became the director-agent of a sovereign dictatorship (to use
Schmittian’s terminology), defining a new (formal and material) constitutionality
24
. Most
notably with the global and systematic "constitutional engineering" designed and
actuated by Rocco until 1928, the contours of a new politico-constitutional order were
being set.
In the first moments of constitutional transformation, a strengthening of power in the
eyes of the chief protagonist of this transformation (Rocco) would operate, constituting
the "most genuine expression of the state": the executive branch. Decree No. 2263 of
24th December 1925 and Decree No. 100 of 31st January 1926 strengthened the structural
seat of government and its head in the governance system. With the first of these
statutes, the political responsibility of the Government to Parliament ends, and a new
institutional figure is created Capo del Governo, Primo Minister Segretario di Stato,
replacing the Presidente del Consiglio figure (Repealing and empting the principles of
ministerial collegiality and solidarity, with the new figure no longer being a mere primus
inter pares). These were assigned to the determining Government powers in relation to
the direction of the inner life of parliamentary chambers (such as institutions failing to
allso see Italie In B. Mirkine-Guetzévitch, Les Constitutions de l 'Europe Nouvelle avec les texts
constitutionnels Part II.ª, Librairie Delagrave, Dixième édition, Paris, 1938, pp. 371-427.
23
Alfredo Rocco, La trasformazione dello Stato: dallo Stato liberale allo Stato fascist, La Voce, Rome, 1927
(the writings of Rocco, namely the relations preceding the so-called fascistissime laws. They were
considered in fascist publicística as canonical writings, and the source of authentic interpretation of state
doctrine and the fascist constitutional law); Sergio Panunzio, generale theory dello Stato fascist, 2nd ed,
Cedam, Padova, 1937.; Carlo Costamagna, Storia del fascism and Dottrina, Editrice Torinese, Turin, 1938.
vide Pietro Costa, Lo 'Stato Totalitarian': un field semantic nella giuspubblicistica del Fascism, in Quaderni
fiorentini per la storia del pensiero modern giuridico, No. 28, Volume I, Giuffrè, Milano, 1999, pp. 61-174.
In our times, here and there, it seems to be pointed out, more or less explicitly, to a characterization of the
experience of the Italian fascist regime as superlative update project the idea of State - vide above: Marcel
Gauchet, À l'épreuve des totalitarismes, L'avènement de la démocratie III, Bibliothèque des sciences
humaines, Gallimard, Paris, 2010, pp. 348 ff. (Chapter VIII, « Le fascisme en lui-même of quête » );
David D. Roberts, The totalitarian experiment in twentieth-century Europe: Understanding the poverty of
great politics, Routledge, London / New York, 2006, pp.271 ff . It is also thought in the interwar literature:
vide Rudolf Smend, Constitucion y Derecho Constitutional, Centro de Estudios Constitucionales, Madrid,
1985. For a topography of views about Italian fascism, for all to see Emilio Gentile, Qu'est-ce que le
fascisme? Histoire et interpretation, French version, Gallimard, Paris, 2004 maxime p. 67 ff.
24
Certain legislative changes initially operated by the new fascist direction of government seemed to already
announce the overcoming of forms of the liberal democratic state: The Royal Decree No. 31 of 14th January
1923 would create a military body to defend public order directly under the Chairman of the Board of the
Volunteer Militia for National Security (Milizia Voluntary per la Nazionale Sicureza, MVSN). By a further
Decree of 4th August 1924, No. 1292, the Militia become would an integral part of the armed forces, and its
members swore an oath to the king. The famous Acerbo Law, Decree No. 2444 of 18th November 1923
would operate the first bottom transformation of electoral legislation, ensuring two-thirds of parliamentary
seats to the list supported by 25 percent of the vote. The RDL No 3288 of 15th July 1923, published only on
8th July 1924, would restrict the freedom of the Press. Several party-based committees had been constituted
in 1923 and 1924 to "work" the issue of constitutional reform. Commissione dei Diciotto or dei Soloni would
be constituted by decree of the President of the Council of 31th January 1925, chaired by Giovanni Gentile,
and was mandated to meditate and present conclusions on the subject of constitutional reform. The
composition of the mestizo commission will not have come to fully express purely fascist constitutional
reform trends, but "debugged liberal" conclusions, to use the language of the fascistíssimo constitutionalist
Carlo Costamagna. Vide Alberto Aquarone, L'organizzazione dello Stato totalitario Cit., Pp. 51 ff.
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enjoy freedom of provision on agendas). These laws regulate with great latitude the use
of normative acts issued by the executive branch, departing from the separation of
powers principle
25
. In subsequent constitutional changes, which would add to the power
of the Head of Government particularly its legal capacity to act on the composition and
the internal life of the new institutions one director would crystallise and unify the
internal life of the State and its action on "society"
26
.
It would project complex judicio-political institutional forms of permanent, objective and
subjective "incorporation", from the socio-economic into the political; the call in the
fascist semantics: "union-corporate planning". Decree No. 563 of 3rd April 1926, providing
discipline for labour relations, prohibiting and incriminating strikes and lockouts, creating
legally recognised unions that were comprised of workers and employers which were
granted the right to conclude valid collective agreements erga omnes and would
structure a judiciary of work
27
. With the executive regulation of this law Decree No.
1130 of 1st July 1926 corporate reform would begin in a strict sense. The regulation
provided for the establishment of institutional mechanisms that would connect
symmetrical unions of each productive sector, terming such mechanisms as corporations.
The self-named Carta del Lavoro of 1927 (see below) in declaration VI doctrinally
enshrined the national-state character of corporations as the basis of the corporate
project:
The corporations constitute the unitary organisation of the forces of
production and integrally represent their interests. By virtue of this
integral representation, and in view of the fact that the interests of
production are the interests of the Nation, the law recognises the
corporations as State organisations
28
.
Decree No. 1131 of 2nd July 1926 would create a Ministry of Corporations. Decree No.
206 of 20th March 1930 structured an apex body of corporate planning, the National
Council of Corporations (Consiglio Nazionale delle corporazione)
29
; based on Decree No.
163 of 5th February 1934, the creation of corporations would be progressively
25
Although also shown to serve a telos of the rationalising ordering of power and its constitutional practices,
the new constitutional engineering was consecrated, however, there was a clear predominance of executive
power in the face of legislative power: the organisational regulations of public services can now counteract
pre-existing laws, thus constituting a kind of reserve decree, antithetical in relation to the classical law of
reserves; decree-laws became provisional laws, able to last for a period of two years this time renewable
for successive decrees producing permanent effects considering that the cameras do not need to confirm
such decrees.
26
Also the local government would be redesigned in an eminently national-state sense, with personal organ
directors of communes and provinces Podesta and Preside to be appointed by the government, and
auxiliary collegiate bodies of a corporate base to replace the "parliamentary" organs previously elected local
(Decree of 4th February 1926, No. 237, of 2nd June, 1927, No. 957, Decree No. 2962 27th December 1928
and No. 383 of 3rd March 1934).
27
Enrolment in the union was optional; professional associations’ existence was not ruled out; in addition to
the contracts of employment, the labour share and certain special rates were mandatory for all who belong
to a given category.
28
Corporations were conceived as unitary organisations of productive forces and integral representatives of
interests - objectives and stakeholders in the production process - from production, and as producers of
mandatory standards on labour relations and the coordination of production.
29
Having also predicted the existence, in the bosom of this body, from a more restricted body: The Central
Committee Corporate (Corporate Comitato centrale).
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implemented, although the corporate reform had not come to be fully actuated
30
. The
corporate project would generate lively debate on fascist "public and political space" a
debate whose fault lines did not fail to reveal a shared basic assumption: the functionality
of the corporate project for (objective and subjective) "production" of the political
community. In the guidance of Rocco, the corporate project appeared to be understood
in an "imperial", "bureaucratic” and “centralist" sense as a reconstruction technique in
complex times of society, and the re-emergence of groups of a fully sovereign State that
could integrate and unify, from top to bottom, the "social magma" so that the "political"
coincides (or returns to coincide) with the "State", which is an imperial scheme of the
political community for society itself
31
. They could also crystallise nuanced centralist
guidelines in which the state - whose reconstruction, strengthening and power increase
continued to be the main goal arising from the structure of societal institutions, from
whose intrinsic relatively autonomous dynamism, the state political process would
receive a minimally influential impulse from the bottom up. In the doctrinaire record of
Giuseppe Bottai, one of the great architects of the Fascist State, corporatism was
conceived as a means of restructuring the State and controlling social magma, but was
also a scheme of self-government of the economy. Corporatism was presented as a
system eminently governed by a "bottom up" logic, but a system of realities based on
the community, of learning places of a civil-community form proprietary corporations
(Ugo Spirito) and large public limited companies (Volpicelli)
32
. A register of control by
the State apparatus, maxime of the management centre of State life, training, internal
life, and normative will of the institutions of the corporate-union, planning would prevail.
The Fascist State was structured "corporately" but "society" could still express itself in
terms of a minimal influence, with corporatism being intrinsically a final dimension of
recognition of a certain irreducible social pluralism
33
.
In another politico-constitutional transformation, the National Fascist Party (NFP) and
the State would be institutionally jointed. Decree No. 2693 of 9th December 1928 would
30
According to Mussolini (14th November 1933): “to apply full, complete, integral and revolutionary
corporatism, three conditions must occur: A single party, to allow the action of political discipline along with
the action of economic discipline, which is above the interests at stake, and that is a bond that unites all in
the same faith. This however is not enough. In addition to the one-party, a totalitarian State is necessary,
i.e. a State that transforms and strengthens all energies, all interests, all the hopes of a people. But still
this is not enough. Third, the final and most important condition: we must live an ideal period of high
tension, like the one we are currently experiencing” Benito Mussolini, O Estado Corporativo, Vallecchi
Editore, Firenze, 1938, pp. 34-35.
31
In a sector of the fascist publicística, there was even a project "of corporatism without corporations", an
ordering scheme in which the State was conceived as an integral and supreme corporation and
"corporations" as mere state bodies of magma formatting social. Toraldo M. di Francia, Per un corporatism
senza corporazione: "Lo Stato" di Carlo Costamagna, in Quaderni fiorentini XVIII, Giuffrè Editore, Milan,
1989, pp. 267-327.
32
On the subject of corporatism(s) in fascism see: Gianpasquale Santomassimo, La terza via fascist: il mito
del corporatism, Carocci editore, Rome, 2006; Lorenzo Ornaghi, Stato and Corporazione, Storia di una
dottrina nella crisi sistema politico contemporaneo, Giuffrè Editore, Milano, 1984; Bernardo Sordi ,
Corporativismo e dottrina dello stato in Italia: incidenze costituzionali e amministrative in Aldo Mazzacane
/ Alessandro / Sum Michael Stolleis (eds.), Korporativismus in den südeuropäischen Diktaturen / Il
corporatism nelle dittature sudeuropee, Das Europa der Diktatur 6 Vittorio Klostermann, Frankfurt am Main,
2005, pp. 129-145; Paolo Grossi, Scienza Italian giuridica. Un profilo storico 1860-1950, Giuffrè, Milano,
2000, p. 171 ff; cfr. furthermore A. Aquarone, op. cit., Pp. 122 ff. vide Pietro Costa, Lo 'Stato Totalitarian':
un field semantic nella giuspubblicistica del Fascism Cit.
33
See Sabino Cassese, Lo Stato fascist, Il Mulino, Bologna 2010. The desired unification of the social would
be operated via ad hoc institutional arrangements and with the outline of the creation of a "managerial"
social state. vide: S. Lupo, Il fascism: La politica in un regime totalitario, Donzelli Editore, Rome Editore,
2000; Maria Sophia Quine, Italy's Social Revolution: Charity and Welfare from Liberalism to Fascism,
Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills/New York, 2002; Guido Melis, Fascismo (ordinamento costituzionale), in
Digesto delle Discipline Pubblicistiche, vol. VI , Reprinting, Turin, 1999 (1st ed. 1991), pp. 259-273.
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erect the Grand Council of Fascism (Gran Consiglio del Fascism) party institution, a
“supreme body that coordinates and integrates all activities of the regime”, reproducing
the terms in Article I
34
. This organ, the composition and discipline of internal life directly
or indirectly by the Head of Government would have to be consulted in the emanation
procedure of constitutional norms. It was also invested with the power to propose to the
Crown a list of three potential names of incumbents from the Head of the Government in
the event of vacancy. With this latest attribution (in favour of in fieri fascist monarchy),
the structural place of the monarchical institution in the governance system changed,
reducing the possibilities of its intervention through appointment and dismissal of the
Head of Government. Through Decree No. 2099 of 14th December 1929 the National
Fascist Party became a full institution in the State. According to this Decree, the NFP’s
status would have to be approved by royal decree on the proposal of the Head of
Government, after hearing the opinions of the Gran Consiglio and the Council of
Ministers; and the most important leaders of the Party should be appointed by decree
through the Head of Government under the Party Secretary-General's proposal. It would
equate to the "fascio littorio" national emblem (12th December 1926, Decree No. 2061),
which subsequently introduced Decree No. 504 of 11th April 1929. Later, through Decree
No. 4 of 11th January 1937, the Secretary-General of the NFP would be granted the
function of Secretary Minister of State
35
. The political order was based on a new device
assigned to the creation of a governing class of a national-state form, and a national
community subjectivity for the members of the political community.
Classical parliamentary political representation would also be "re-institutionalised". At
first, with Decree No. 1019 of 17th May 1928, the Fascist Grand Council ( taking
advantage of the effects of the internal life of the State) was established based on
suggestions of names submitted by the fascist unions and other associations, which
would select (with full decisional freedom) a list of 400 deputies that the electorate could
support or reject as a whole. With Decree No. 129 of 19th January 1939, the House of
Representatives would become extinct through the creation of the "Camera dei Fasci e
delle Corporazioni”. Such an institution distinguished itself from liberal-democratic legal
mechanisms of political representation. The new chamber would not be separated
(through elections) from the traditional, individualistic and abstractly determined
"people"; however, it would be separate from any organised and political public. It would
bring together the Head of Government and, based on the NFP and corporate-union
planning, members of the Fascist Grand Council, of the National Council of Corporations
(National Advisers) and of the National Fascist Party National Council. The new institution
was to work with the Government in the formation of laws, where, according to Article
2, "[the Senate and] the Camera of Fasces and Corporations collaborate with the
Government in the formation of laws". The Head of Government shall appoint directly or
indirectly members of this institution; it acquired the ability to affect the power to
approve bills between the House and the various committees.
36
34
Created on 15th December 1922; the first official meeting would be announced to the people of Italy on 11th
January stating that the "meetings shall be convened and chaired by the Head of Government".
35
In 1937 a single youth party organisation a Gioventu Italiana del Littorio also crystallises
36
The issue of political representation reform was a highly debated topic in fascism (having been resistant
towards the abandonment of traditional electoral principles). Within the legal doctrine of public law, the use
of the concept of representation was maintained in the characterisation of the Fascist State. The concept
might, however, be reformulated: for example, with the construction of the "institutional representation"
(Esposito) concept in the characterisation of the Fascist State being an institution and based on institutions
the Fascist State could not fail to be, in many respects, representative. Certain voices Spirito and
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In the final days of the regime, the politico-constitutional situation pre-announced the
achievement of a fully fascist politico-constitutional order, with the "re-
institutionalisation" of institutions that had thus far been less "redefined" by processes
of constitutional transformation of the Crown and Senate or they were simply
suppressed
37
. It would be the successful implementation or at least the perfecting of
a monarchical political organisation dedicated to "absorbing", organising and fully
unifying "the social" in the political.
The public fascist orthodoxy: The Political Community as an Absolute
In addition to an overhaul of the institutions, the sovereign fascist dictatorship also
sought to solemnly and codify the radical ethics. The instances manifested in a constant
axiological regard addressed to the quid political community, interpreting it as empting
itself in the universe of the valuable, and even explicitly as an absolute.
Alfredo Rocco was one of the first to synthesize the fascist creed. The author would "
immanentistically" decline a classic communal conception of the politico-community
without reference to a telos above or a trans-political. According to Rocco, fascism would
constitute a new and more perfect interpretation of the politico-corporate community.
The political society would be understood as a reality for an age a potentially
encompassing unity of an infinite number of generations with a "structure" of purposes
coinciding with the ends of the human species, and so a concrete undertaking for
humanity. Fascism would thus differentiate itself from other modern political phenomena
liberalism, democracy, socialism all perceived as sharing the conception of the
political society as a sum of individuals, as quid that lives for individuals whose ends are
but the "particularistic" ends of individuals
38
.
Giovanni Gentile would see the (better) concept of the regime in the idea of the “Ethical
State” (in turn, the essence of the idea of the State):
Volpicelli would argue, however, about the non-applicability of the concept to the State Fascist: for such
voices, the distinction between society and people and State, that would presuppose representation, would
make sense ("ontologically" and in the specific fascist universe). Vide Pietro Costa, Lo Stato Totalitario’: un
campo semantico nella giuspubblicistica del Fascismo Cit., Pp. 97 to 101.
37
Note that the celebrated speech by Udine on 20th September 1922 (the institutions “could not be approved
or disapproved sotto la specie dell 'eternità”; fascism accepted monarca suficientemente monarca)” having
put an end to the "Republican trend" that manifested itself in the generic period of fascism. In a famous
private conversation with Ciano, Mussolini expressed, however, several times, the intention of eliminating
the monarchy.
38
Alfredo Rocco, A doutrina política do Fascismo (Portuguese version), in Antonio José de Brito (ed.), Para a
Compreensão do Fascismo, Nova Arrancada, Lisbon, 1999, pp. 51-74. Behind the formulation and design
of its "State doctrine" was a certain “jurist mental path"; now, for example, by finding that the construction
of the State adopted by the school of German public law and by the Italian law school (the so-called legal
State theory, a "jurist’s" theory of the State, whose telos at least in the Italian version was to expunge
the discourse of legal knowledge of political and axiological moments), conveyed an implicit idea of the
strong and mono-archical State, counteracting (in the author's view) the entire individualist ideology of the
French Revolution (e.g., with the concept of self-limitation of the State such as the concepts of
sovereignty and the legal personality of the State, (legal) dogma of such legal-formal approaches to State
to serve as the basis for individual rights, individual liberties left to be seen as pre-positive rights of the
individual becoming represented as concessions made by the State in their interest, thus enshrining the full
subordination of individual interests to collective interests and the derivation of the citizen of the State).
Vide Paolo Ungari, Alfredo Rocco and l'Ideology giuridica del Fascism, Morcelliana, Brescia, reimp. 1974 (1st
ed. 1963).
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[S]o the ethical Estate, not in the sense of a reality that made one
think of a reality superimposed on the will of individuals, but that is
the very essence of individuality of the individual, who only
manifests himself as the universal will.
The fascist State maxime for the corporate project overcoming abstract class divisions
in a real national "like-mindedness" would "reflect" and "express" the universal morality
of individuals, a moment directed to the political community, i.e. the "in interiore
hominem" State
39
. Hence the philosopher, finding objectivity in subjectivity (our words),
had been able to sustain that
"fascism is this affirmation of identity between genuine liberalism
and the morality of the State”
40
.
The Carta del Lavoro (Charter of Labour) was the writing to help form public fascist ethics.
In the fascist world, the Charter was not assimilated into the Declaration of the Human
Rights of the French Revolution. Emanating from a political or extra-judicial and formal
document in 1927 by the Gran Consiglio del Fascism, the Government would be
legislatively authorised to give its actuation (Decree of 18th December 1928) having
finally been elevated to the source (in a technical sense) of positive law with a Decree
on 30th January 1941 that recognised the value of general declarations of law and
governing criteria for the interpretation and application of the law; a certain sector of the
doctrine understood that even the Charter belonged to the existing positive and judicial
order with real value and its own constitutional act
41
. Article I of the Charter read:
The Italian nation is an organism that has its ends, life and means
of superior action for the individuals that compose it. It is a political
and economic unit that is fully realised in the Fascist State. The
production, taken as a whole, is unitary in the national point of view;
its objectives are unitary and are summarised in the wellbeing of
individuals and the development of national power
42
.
A principle of the “internal finality of the State" to use the interpretative of the
Constamagna fascist constitutionalist formula translated into the State prioritising the
personal interests of the political community as a whole (maximising its power and
potency), giving substance to the legal system.
39
See Giovanni Gentile, Philosophy of Fascism (1937/1941), in Antonio José de Brito (ed.), Para a
Compreensão do Fascismo Nova Arrancada, Lisbon, 1999 pp. 35 ff.
40
About the continuity between fascism and liberalism according to Gentile vide: Augusto del Noce, Giovanni
Gentile. Per una storia della interpretazione philosophical contemporary, Il Mulino, Bologna, 1990, p. 393-
4; cfr. Also, Richard Bellamy, Idealism and Liberalism in an Italian 'New Liberal Theorist': Guido Ruggiero's
History of European Liberalism, in The History Journal, vol. 30, No. 1, 1987 P. 198.
41
Costamagna and its magazine Lo Stato - vide Toraldo M. di Francia, op. cit., P. 309.
42
Point II reads "work in all its intellectual, technical or manual forms, whether in organisation or execution,
it is a social duty. Only this concept is under state protection".
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An "official" self-interpretation or quasi-official, from a formal-legal point of view
finally crystallised with the publication of the text Dottrina del Fascism written by
Mussolini and Giovanni Gentile
43
. This text evoked and theorised about the State and the
individual as Absolutes. Human action was understood as something that runs throughout
political society; political society not appearing clearly ordered to a summum bonum
meta-political:
The man of Fascism is an individual who is nation and fatherland,
which is a moral law, binding together individuals and the
generations into a tradition and a mission, suppressing the instinct
for a life enclosed within the brief round of pleasure in order to
restore within duty a higher life free from the limits of time and
space; a life in which the individual, through the denial of himself,
through the sacrifice of his own private interests, through death
itself, realizes that completely spiritual existence in which his value
as a man lies… Fascism is a religious conception in which man is
seen in his immanent relationship with a superior law and with an
objective Will that transcends the particular individual and raises
him to conscious membership in a spiritual society... Against
individualism, the Fascist conception is for the State; and it is for
the individual in so far as he coincides with the State, which is the
conscience and universal will of man in his historical existence... For
the Fascist, everything is in the State, and nothing human or
spiritual exists, much less has value, outside the State. In this sense
Fascism is totalitarian, and the Fascist State, the synthesis and unity
of all values, interprets, develops and gives strength to the whole
life of the people
44
. The "base of fascist doctrine” to quote a
paragraph from one part of the text (entitled Political and social
doctrine), established by the founder of the fascist order “is the
conception of the State, of its essence, its obligations and purposes.
For Fascism the State is absolute, before which individuals and
groups represent the relative. Individuals and groups are
conceivable only if they belong to the State”
45
.
Fascism as a comprehensive doctrine and civilizational project
According to Article 147, the new fascist Civil Code, "Education and instruction shall
conform to the principles of morality and the fascist national sentiment”. Giovanni Gentile
famously highlighted that:
One cannot be fascist in politics and not fascist... in school, not
fascist in one’s family, not fascist in one’s work. Like a Catholic, if
43
Benito Mussolini, Doutrina do Fascismo (Portguese vers.), in Antonio José de Brito (ed.), Para a
Compreensão do Fascismo, Nova Arrancada, Lisbon, 1999, pp. to 13-34.
44
Cf. Paragraphs 2, 5 and 7 from Benito Mussolini, Doctrine of Fascism, cit., pp. 16, 17 and 18.
45
Benito Mussolini, Doctrine of Fascism, cit., p. 27 (beginning of paragraph 10 of section the "Doctrine of
Fascism 'mentioned in the text).
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one is a Catholic, one invests his whole life with religious
sentiment... if he is truly Catholic, and has religious sense, one
remember always in the highest part of one’s mind to work and
thinking and pray and meditate and feel Catholic; so too a fascist,
who goes to parliament, or to the fascist house, writes in the
newspapers or reads them, follows his private life or converses with
others, looks to his future or thinks of his past and the past of his
people, ought always to think of himself as a fascist!
46
.
The comprehensive nature of fascism does not suffer doubt. All "realities" of existence
were potentially references to the City (a city to itself) realities such as family, marriage
and the "feminine" constituted potentially reconceptualisable and reconstructable
realities essentially as public goods.
Illustrating the comprehensive vocation of fascism, the fascist constitutionalist
Costamagna, for example, drafted a new normative general director of human sciences,
with an architectural and structural place in the system of knowledge equivalent to
ancient theology, a State science understood as a science of the common good of a
particular community organised in the State
47
.
Mussolini would mark a universal vocation to the fascist idea and fascist regime:
Today I hold that Fascism as an idea, a doctrine, a realisation, is
universal; it is Italian in its particular institutions, but it is universal
in the spirit, nor could it be otherwise. The spirit is universal by
reason of its nature. Therefore anyone may foresee a Fascist
Europe. Drawing inspiration for her institutions from the doctrine
and practice of Fascism; Europe, in other words, giving a Fascist
turn to the solution of problems which beset the modern State, the
Twentieth Century State which is very different from the States
existing before 1789, and the States formed immediately after.
Today Fascism fills universal requirements; Fascism solves the
threefold problem of relations between State and individual,
between State and associations, between associations and
organized associations
48
.
During the vinténio, political symbols such as the "New Age", the "New Civilization" and
"Young Man" were often evoked in public and political spaces, revealing the will of global
reinstitution of order of human affairs
49
. The fascist regime was defining itself as a carrier
regime of a universalist, ethico-political ideal of a new civilization, an ideal and project
centred around a new subjectivity consistent with man's identification with the political
46
Cf. Giovanni Gentile, Che cosa è il fascism? In Giovanni Gentile, Politics and culture Herve Cavallera A.
(ed.), Vol. 2, Le Lettere, Florence, 1991, p 86, cited in Mabel Berezin, op. cit., P. 51.
47
Carlo Costamagna, Storia del fascism and Dottrina cit.
48
Benito Mussolini, Doctrine of Fascism, cit., p. 30, note 2 (reproducing the “year IX message to federal
directories convened in Venezia Palace on 27th October 1930”).
49
Dante Germino, Italian Fascism in the History of Political Thought, in Midwest Journal of Political Science,
Vol. 8, No. 2, 1964 pp. 119 ff.
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community, the idea life in a civil and political context, like the alpha and omega of
civilization
50
. As pointed out by some, fascism was to constitute a universal ideology;
hence the decoupling of Nation in the sense of community with an inherited historical
structure and its own mandatory and autonomous order.
The development of Ideas of Empire and Universal Ecumene with a sense of life extension
in the polis occupied the politico-constitutional imagination of the intellectual fascist
stratum. Already consolidated, the fascist regime could, for example, suggested that the
telos of the fascist project would consist of a world order based on the principle of
universalisation of a regime of community civility. According to A. Volpicelli, the ethics -
the incessant overcoming of separations and antagonisms - would be the substance and
the internal norm of the Political; the human need to include men in the circle of humanity
would lead to a common spiritual life and a regime of peace. The telos of the policy would
not be nationalism, but the articulation of people in an organic unit
51
.
Fascism and Catholicism: The Ethical State and the "transcendentist
virtuality "
In a speech in 1930, Giuseppe Bottai defines Fascism as
"a political and civil religion... the religion of Italy”
52
.
Nevertheless, as the basis of the nationalist "idealistic” and “spiritualist" revolution,
fascism claimed to be favourable to "traditional religious fact", namely the Catholic
religious dimension of the Italian national tradition. The Doctrine of Fascism explicitly
codified such an idea:
The State is not indifferent to religious phenomena in general nor
does it maintain an attitude of indifference to Roman Catholicism,
the special, positive religion of Italians. The State has not got a
theology but it has a moral code. The Fascist State sees in religion
one of the deepest of spiritual manifestations and for this reason it
not only respects religion but defends and protects it. The
Fascist State does not attempt, as did Robespierre at the height of
the revolutionary delirium of the Convention, to set up a "god” of its
own; nor does it vainly seek, as does Bolshevism, to efface God from
the soul of man Fascism respects the God of ascetics, saints, and
50
Emilio Gentile, Qu'est-ce que le fascisme? Histoire et interpretation, cit, p. 122.
51
Cf. David D. Roberts, Myth, Style, Substance and the Totalitarian Dynamic in Fascist Italy, in Contemporary
European History, Vol. 16, No. 1, 2007, p 31, referring to Arnold Volpicelli, preface to Carl Schmitt, principii
politici, Ed. Delio Cantimori, GC Sansoni, Florence 1935 vii. About corporatism as a universal grammar
(likely to build a European and universal order) conveyed by the fascist regime, cfr. also: A. Volpicelli,
Corporazione and ordinamento internazionale, in Archivio of Studi Corporative, Vol. V n ºS III-IV, 1934, pp.
329-339; Luca Nogler, Corporatiste Doctrine and the "New European Order" In Christian Joerges / Navraj
Singh Ghaleigh (dir.), Darker Legacies of Law in Europe Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2003, pp. 275-304.
52
Apud Emilio Gentile, Qu'est-ce que le fascisme? Histoire et interpretation, cit, p. 255.
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heroes, and it also respects God as conceived by the ingenuous and
primitive heart of the people
53
.
On 9th January 1938 at the Palazzo Venezia before more than 60 bishops and 2,000
priests, the Duce portrayed the fascist order as based on the principle of "friendly
cooperation" between the State and the Church and fascist Italy, as well as being a
"stronghold of Christian civilization" and a "Catholic nation"
54
.
With the signing on 11th February 1929 of the Lateran Treaty between Italy and the Holy
See, the fascist regime co-opted Catholic Christianity as part of the order, and a time
would even come when a public Christian paradigm would be adopted
55
. A concordat
would regulate relations between Church and State in the country. The teaching of
Christian doctrine was the foundation and crowning of public instruction taught in
elementary schools and secondary schools, according to agreed programmes between
the State and the Catholic Church, and marital canon law was received by through
ordering of the State
56
. A treaty consecrated the foundation of the Vatican City State
under the sovereignty of the Supreme Pontiff and the recognition by the Holy See of the
Kingdom of Italy “under the dynasty of Savoy, with Rome as capital of the Italian State".
Whether the Concordat or the Lateran Treaty, in the first article of each of these
documents, a confessionality principle of the State was reaffirmed, with the Catholic
religion being the only official State religion
57
.
The fascist regime would be established, however, explicitly as an order founded on a
moral basis independent of religion (the Ethical State). A "novation" of "tradition",
Catholic Christianity was consciously and theoretically received as ordering content from
a self-referential exterior (sovereignty), by a State which interpreted itself as Norma
Normarum, thus repeating the original formula of the modern State.
There was another thought of the chief negotiator from the redefinition of the relationship
between the State and the Church, a thought that was indeed formed early. From the
words of Alfredo Rocco in 1914:
Nationalists do not believe that the State should be an instrument
of the Church; they believe, instead, that the State must also assert
its sovereignty in relation to the Church. Since, however, they
recognise that religion and the Catholic Church are very important
factors of national life, they wish to watch over Catholic interests as
far as possible, always safeguarding State Sovereignty. And at this
53
This is paragraph 12 of the aforementioned part of this "coding" text prepared by the Duce - Cfr. Benito
Mussolini, Doctrine of Fascism, cit., p. 29.
54
Cf. Emilio Gentile, New idols: Catholicism in the face of Fascist totalitarianism, in Journal of Modern Italian
Studies, vol. 11, No. 2, 2006, p. 161.
55
On the relations between the fascist regime, the Catholic Church and Catholicism, see: John Pollard,
Catholicism in Modern Italy, Religion, Society and, since 1861 Politics , Routledge, London / New York,
2008, pp. 69-107; John Pollard, The Vatican and Italian Fascism, 1929-32, A study in conflict, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge/New York, 1985; Alice A. Kelikian, The Church and Catholicism , in Adrian
Lyttelton, Liberal and Fascist Italy, Oxford University Press, Oxford/New York, 2002, p. 44-61.
56
A Financial Agreement still made up the Church by the loss of the Papal States.
57
The Lateran Treaty are available at:
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/secretariat_state/archivio/documents/rc_seg-st_19290211_patti-
lateranensi_it.html .
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stage of Italian life, this protection should take the form of respect
for freedom of conscience of Italian Catholics, against the anti-
religious persecution of anticlerical democrats. In the future, it may
be possible to go further and establish an agreement with the
Catholic Church, even if only tacit, by which the Catholic
organisation could serve the Italian nation’s expansion in the
world
58
.
On 13th May 1929 at the presentation of the Lateran Pacts to the Chamber of Deputies,
Mussolini thus describes the essence of the Fascist State:
The fully fascist State proclaims in its full ethical character; it is
Catholic, but it is fascist, it is above all, exclusively, essentially
Fascist. Catholicism integrates it, we declare it openly, but no-one
dreams of us changing the cards on the table with philosophy and
metaphysical claims. It is useless to deny the moral character of the
fascist State, because it embarrasses me to speak from this rostrum
if I did not feel the representative of the moral and spiritual strength
of the State. What would the State be if it did not have a spirit, its
own morality, which is what gives strength to its laws and makes
citizens obey them?
59
Under the doctrine of the Ethical State, as a man expresses his duty in full in the political
community, religion should be integrated in the space of the polis as an "internal"
component. According to Giovanni Gentile:
The fascist State is an ethical State, since strict, complete and
concrete human will cannot not be ethical. It is also a religious State.
This does not mean that it is a confessional State, even if it is
connected with treaties and concordats of a particular Church, as it
is connected to the Italian State. The limitation that such treaties
and concordats bring to the freedom of the State (that in the modern
State, i.e. according to modern consciousness, cannot fail to be an
absolute freedom) is a self-limitation similar to the human spirit
practised to set a concrete form; similar to the one that makes the
Italian not surrender their freedom when speaking, and is forced to
speak a language to which he should be subject to possess a
grammar. In the historical reality of the nation, Fascism felt that
being religious is equivalent to being Catholic. To adapt the State to
58
Apud Michael Burleigh, Sacred Causes: The Clash of Religion and Politics, from the Great War to the War
on Terror, HarperCollins, New York, 2007, p. 66.
59
This excerpt of Mussolini's speech can be seen in Benito Mussolini, Doutrina do Fascismo, cit., pp. 32-33,
note 12. "A holy war in Italy, never; the priests never mobilise the peasants against the State"; the Duce
would say the same thing. On Mussolini’s thought on religious themes, vide Didier Musiedlak, Religion and
Political Culture in the Thought of Mussolini, in Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, Vol. 6, No. 3,
2005, pp. 395-406.
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the Italian personality, it went against the Catholic Church, ended
the old labour agreement and pacified the homeland tempers and
religion never ceased to keep intact and intangible their autonomy
from the Church. For this reason, the right to education of the new
generations that the Church, curator of souls, saved for you as a
matter of their exclusive competence has been reclaimed
60
.
The position towards Catholicism was, therefore, not subject to substantive order, but of
historical accident. Being that the State was an ethical "place", its last character could
never be called into question:
The State contains and ensures all spiritual values, including
religion; it cannot be admitted without depriving the whole principle
of sovereignty, supreme power to which this should subject itself in
some part from the content understood in its ethical field
61
.
An atmosphere of tension between State and Church erupted at the very moment in
which the concordat was signed with Mussolini to make declarations about Christianity
that the pope would consider heretical and threatening to the ratification of the
concordat. Later, in 1931 and 1938, concrete conflicts occurred around the issue (the
monopoly issue) of the education of new generations and the limits of social action of the
Catholic lay apostolate framed by the Hierarchical Church (Catholic Action).
62
Although
the explicitly intense tension had been punctual, and the said conflicts were in extremis
and always "pragmatically" composed , the contradiction became apparent between
principled fascist doctrine of the State (and its placement in relation to the Church) on
the one hand, and Catholic doctrine on the other
63
. In the encyclical Non abbiamo bisogno
promulgated on 29th June 1931, for example, the fascist regime was represented (against
the backdrop of what was seen as its attempt to “completely monopolise the young
people from their young age") as "a regime based on an ideology which clearly resolves
a real pagan worship of the State as “a statolatry”, which is no less in contrast to the
natural rights of the family that is in contradiction with the supernatural rights of the
60
Giovanni Gentile, Philosophy of Fascism Cit., P. 47.
61
Giovanni Gentile Fascism and Coltura, Treves, Milan, 1928, pp. 173 ff. The writings of the philosopher,
because of its immanent character (religion, for example, was "resolved" or "overcome" in philosophy,
defined as human-spiritual immanentism), would no longer appear in the Index prepared by the
Congregation of the Holy Office. With the purpose of the celebration of the Concordat, Gentile defines "the
Duce of Fascism" as "the most vigilant sentinel of the essence and of the inalienable characteristic of the
modern State" apud H.S. Harris, The Social Philosophy of Giovanni Gentile, University of Illinois Press,
Urbana, 1960, p. 199.
62
In 1931, the government would sponsor the dissolution of the Catholic Youth Clubs (though in 1927 a
political orientation in the same direction related to Catholic sports organisations had already been
undertaken). In 1938, the opposition of the Catholic Action in relation to racial doctrines adopted by the
Fascist Power was at play (vide infra). [Built by Benedict XV in 1915 from the Italian Catholic lay movement,
Pius XI confirmed and universalised it, trying to secure it in the concordats celebrated during his pontificate.]
63
Note also that Catholic culture has continued to fear the creation of a national Church with the subordination
of Church to State.
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Church"
64
. In a declaration issued on 18th September 1938 by Castel Gandolfo, Pius XI
would state:
If there is a totalitarian regime de facto and de jure [emphasis
added] it is the Church of the regime, because man belongs
entirely to the Church, and must belong to it, because man is a
creature of the Lord
65
.
Regardless of whether and to what extent there has been an attempt, not without
nostalgia of the "pure" unity of the "old city", it superimposes a new liturgy to daily Italy
or Catholicism fascisation Catholicism as a product of Romanism the fascist order
was indeed innate, by the same scope of its idea, the possibility or virtuality of a
community ethos replacing Christianity as an existential paradigm, as grammar of the
collective existence
66
.
Conversely, however, perhaps it may be said, following the philosopher Augusto Del
Noce, that ultimately the fascist regime did not let Christian transcendent virtuality exist,
a virtuality of reinterpretation of the regime for processing the modus vivendi that came
to be established with the Catholic Church in a truly normative reality a hypothesis that
would not be able to pass the act from the entry into the war alongside the National
Socialist Reich. In 1938, the fascist constitutionalist Panunzio, for example, in his general
theory of the Fascist State (a work which all referred to the State) could suggest the
idea, although without leaving an idealistic perspective and without putting (implicitly or
explicitly) a Christian point of view, where this fascist State vision would (in contrast to
the Hegelian State) construct one axiological penultimate:
While for Mussolini, everything exists in the State; nothing outside
the State; nothing against the State; but it is not true that nothing,
not the political side, but the philosophical and moral other, is above
the State; for Hegel, instead, nothing is above the State, for the
simple reason that the State is everything and is what God himself
performed in the world... It can and should be said, rather, that the
fascist State belongs to the cycle of transcendental idealist
philosophy, while the Hegelian State is based on immanence, from
there it is God Himself... Oriented towards the transcendence is the
very recent phase of the Italian idealist thought, hence the "internal"
64
And also like a "species of religion” and the "farce of religion” irreconcilable and contrary to" Catholic doctrine
and practice". The encyclical can be found at
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/pius_xi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_enc_19310629_non-abbiamo-
bisogno_it.html .
65
Cf. Emilio Gentile, New idols: Catholicism in the face of Fascist totalitarianism Cit., P. 163. A similar concept
can be found in other universes of Christian confession: vide Graeme Smith, Christian totalitarianism, in
Political Theology, vol. 3 No 1, 2001 pp 32-46.
66
The regime would erect a Fascist Mystique school in 1930 (and Julius Evola, also the Fascist universe would
know their explicitly neo-pagan minority niche). The fascist regime may perhaps say what has been said
about the nature of the Machiavellian theologico-political project: "[F]or one side generally supports a 'civil
religion' Christian or otherwise that promotes a ‘functionally’ civic solidarity. Moreover, attempts to
revive an old sanctity, producing a new mythos of heroes without gods" - vide John Milbank, Theology and
Social Theory: Beyond Secular Reason, 2nd ed., Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, 2006, p. 25.
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dissolution of the current idealistic position visible in the
representatives of this school descended from Gentile. The current
idealism, reversing Gioberti’s position, that of transcendence
moving towards the immanence, from God to history, today is the
inverse path from the human to the divine, from History to the
Idea
67
.
The historic commitment to the representative forces of tradition, always reaffirmed in
extremis, it did not exceed, however, a level of modus vivendi, revealing itself as
intrinsically precarious. The regime did not bring the "Christian restoration of Italian
society in a Catholic sense", as desired by Pius XI in 1929.
Terminal times of the fascist experience: mimesis in relation to the
National Socialist politico-constitutional paradigm.
So far we have been studying the so-called vinténio. Now a few words must be said about
the last days of the fascist politico-constitutional experience, thematising the problem of
whether the axiophonic constitutional paradigm that was defined suffered or trans-
mutated, in particular due to the mimicry of politico-constitutional formula that
crystallised in the National Socialist Reich one formula based on the absolute elevation
of a race-based political community that identified with a concrete historical person (an
community-individual), as there will be occasion to prove in the next chapter.
Fascism was one judicial construction and perhaps constitutionalist in its own way. The
progressive changes to the Albertino State changed mainly as a "full constitution" and
not so much as a set of literal linguistic statements did not fail to observe the rules of
constitutional transformation by that initially planned or the rules of constitutional
transformation of every consolidated moment (formalist constitutional transformation)
68
.
During the vinténio, and for the first time in Italian constitutional history, distinction in
terms of formal identity and strength between constitutional law and common law
would be made, with a true (formal) constitutional right emerging. By Decree No. 2693
of 9th December 1928 one of the great reform laws of the Statuto Albertino
constitutional law acquired (ex vi Article 12) a formal identity as opposed to ordinary law,
establishing a specially qualified procedure for its emanation. The dynamic (and meaning)
of constitutional transformation and the proper political environment at the end of the
regime tended to point to "political status" being defined, according to the
constitutionalism of the canon, in a originally fascist written constitution, or included a
fully fascist Statuto Albertino. The order of the Grand Fascist Council approved on 14th
March 1938, after deliberation on the constitution of the House of Fasci and Corporations,
67
Cf. Sergio Panunzio Teoria generale dello Stato fascista, Cit. p. 18 ff., Footnote 2, referring to the
interpretations of idealism of Balbino Giuliano (Minister of Education from 1929 to 1932) and philosopher
Ruggero Rinaldi.
68
According to overwhelming legal and constitutional doctrine and dominant representation in liberalism of
the political class (and fascism), Statuto Albertino, a Constitution that framed the "political game" since the
founding of the Kingdom of Italy, was considered a flexible constitution having a formal force that did not
distinguish the formal power of ordinary legislation.
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"decides whether to proceed to completion/conclusion of the
constitutional reform with the updating of the Status of the
Kingdom”
69
.
The constitutional law seemed to be (re)imagined as maximising state power (from the
power of the Government) and integrating "society" through and into the State. Law No.
2693 of 9th December 1928 establishing a new reinforced place for formal constitutional
law did not fail to reveal the new allocations of this essential, so "unhidding" the deep
standard guiding constitutional changes actuated by the fascist political class. From the
circle of subjects now defined, constitutional fundamental rights were not included
(therefore revealing the positive constitutional law of the fascist Revolution), subjects
acquired constitutional status related to State organisation and the laws of the process
of constitutional emanation started to intervene with a key institution of the State Party,
the Gran Consiglio del Fascism, through the same law in place in the constitutional body.
As the fascistissimi constitutionalists noted, the Fascist State, constituting a more perfect
historical achievement and finishing the concept of State, was and should be, in the
superlative, a "Legal State" (State as a "domain" governed by an order of written positive
norms establishing the processes of its own change). Given the body like any other
realisation of the idea of State as a central integrator of the political Community, the
fascist State also needed like any other state political community a "formal architecture"
(an order of legal rules) for organisation (given the unprecedented levels of the
concentration of power, the greater complexity of its organisation and the extent of its
functional allocations)
70
. These authors did not fail to formulate suggestions to maximise
the size of the Judicial State of the Fascist State. In addition to strengthening the power
of the judiciary in general, both proposed the establishment of judicial control
mechanisms of the constitutionality of laws as a way to ensure consistency in the legal
system (which can be called into question by the growing pluralism of normative sources)
and protect the objective values” of the political community in constitutional law
71
.
With the benefit of hindsight, it can be said that the in fieri fascist order seemed to
materialise in a centre of personal power surrounded by subordinate institutions. The end
of the regime recorded the flowering of a bio-political conception of order where the
influence of German ideas of the Führerstaat could be felt. Within the legal community,
69
Attesting to the constitutional vocation of fascism, the last days of the vinténio were dominated by debate
on the question of codification among political elites and the legal community (linked to the fascist political
class) in a document provided with special formal value and the fundamental principles of fascist law a
hypothesis seen and felt as compensation for a politically (still) unfeasible constitutionalisation (complete
and true). Furthermore, in this debate, the famous model Carta del Lavoro (a document declaring large
fascist material principles of ordering the coexistence in the Polis) would be made explicit by the legally
binding legislative process (by Decree of 30th January 1941).
70
According to detailed Costamagna, "the comprehensive and totalitarian nature” of the Nuovo Stato”
postulated a legal order (a formal normative order), quantitatively and qualitatively more legal, because it
was more complete and more intense (relative to typical state orders). Such an order would tend to be
omni-comprehensive (that would be a more concrete and complete normative order with the existence of
systemic responses for the regulatory issues that fit within the potential regulative system only in the
abstract could it be singled out as an intrinsic property of any law). In that order, formal mandatory
regulations issued by the power would be multiply and the legislative activity would follow superlatively to
a principle of specialisation (due to distribution and tiering the immanent task of building a new political
power incorporator centre from "society"). In addition, in the new constitutional ecology the idea of duty of
obedience to positive law would be restored (in the context of ideological integration of action promoted by
power and as a result of the reconstruction of the State). Vide - Carlo Costamagna, Storia..., op. cit., p.
163-165 and 323. Cf. Also Sergio Panunzio, Teoria..., op.cit. P. 49.
71
Vide L. Paladin, op. cit., P. 900.
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at the end of the regime, certain representative legal operators tended to "describe" the
powers of central management of State life of Benito Mussolini in not particularly
legal-rational terms, as power was not strictly internal to a legal and formal order. From
Decree No. 129 of 19th January 1939 the normative provisions in which the Head of
Government appeared designated as the Duce del Fascism power would draw
normative support for the idea that the "deputies" were linked to demonstrations of the
"extra-judicial and formal" will of Benito Mussolini
72
.
Over the time of the vinténio one quintessentially "mono-archical" State crystallises, but
it was not exactly similar to the constitutional German doctrine of the Führerstaat. Unlike
its success in Hitler Germany, the constitutional was not, however, identified with a
concrete historical person
73
. In legal doctrine, the Duce symbol referred to the
exceptional role of the constituent taken by Mussolini a constituent of an eminently
formal legal order and was a figure set up as an institution provisionally occupied by a
historically exceptional incumbent. In the words of Carlo Costamagna:
The problem of “Boss” is the most delicate of all the problems posed
by the organisation of the New State. We should not confuse it with
the problem of Duce, i.e. the founder of the regime, nor let itself be
confused by the fact that the New State, born from revolution still
in progress, is updated yet in a constituent process that implies the
dictatorship of that man of exception, through which the story has
fulfilled its task: the creation of the new order. And, in fact, once
the reasons for dictatorship disappeared, so the reasons for unity
left too. If the new State is obliged to become a way of being
permanent, i.e. a way of life, it cannot, given its hierarchical
structure, dismiss the function of chief; even the latter does not
have the extraordinary proportions from that which promoted the
revolution (1938)
74
.
On the other hand, in the ending times of the vinténio, the politico-constitutional
existence begins to be constructed according to a racial idea. A resolution of the Grand
Fascist Council on 6th October 1938 proclaiming a carta della razza” would constitute the
starting point. Next would be the emanation of a racial legislation that deviate totally and
definitively from the liberal idea of equality in the Statuto Albertino. Specific prohibitions
were imposed on "citizens" of the "Jewish race", squashing their legal capacity
75
. Then
72
Armando Jamalio, L. "interpretazione authenticates" del Duce, in Rivista di Diritto Publico. La Guistizia
amministrativa Part I, No. 22, 1939 pp. 302-325.
73
Despite the disclosure of the maximum known as "Mussolini is always right” (vide paragraph VIII of the
Decalogue of Militiaman Fascist; in paragraph X of this book read “One thing is to be your precious self
above all: the life Duce”). One might argue that the vinténio tended to crystallise an autonomous myth
about Mussolini beyond the fascist idea, an emerging "bottom-up" myth of popular Messianic "creation" that
was not fascist.
74
Carlo Costamagna, Storia..., op. cit., P. 419. The leading position of fascism first appeared formally
enshrined in the Statute of the Fascist Party in 1926: according to its 1st Rule: "The hierarchies of the NFP
are: 1. the Duce ..." Decree No. 240 of 2nd April 1938 underlined a particularly symbolic form of the centrality
of the Duce figure in the in fieri order: The Empire Marshal of dignity would be granted by it in accordance
with article 2, on an equal footing with “S.M. the Emperor and King Benito Mussolini, Duce of Fascism”
75
For example, no longer would they be able to be custodians or guardians of minors or disabled people who
were not Jewish; to be proprietors or exercise management companies declared of interest to the nation's
defence, or that had more than one hundred employees; be owners of land exceeding a certain value; have
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the marriage celebrations between a “pure” Italian citizen and a person belonging to
another race came prohibited (Royal Decree No. 1728 of 17th November 1938).
Additionally, in exemption to the concordat regime, the celebration of Catholic marriages
would not receive civil effects and were not transcribed. Marriage between an Italian
citizen and a foreign national who is subject to authorisation by the Minister of the
Interior was forbidden along with civil servants, the military, the NFP, as well as any
other administration. Despite the legislative use of categories like the Aryan and Jewish
race
76
, a forum for debate would also open up about the meaning and scope of racism,
specifically regarding Italian cultural and its spiritual or "blood". Underlying this specific
line of final politico-constitutional transformation at least in terms of Mussolini’s
strategy was the development and declination of new mythos of national mobilisation,
from mythos of an elevated self-image (from the consciousness) of the Italian national
77
.
The terminal times of the vinténio would indeed be marked by a moment of intensification
of production of a communal subjectivity, when it was part and parcel of the famous anti-
bourgeois campaign
78
.
In any case, with the declination of a racial idea, the previous shiver and famous
Mussolinian proclamations of "sovereign contempt" by "certain doctrines coming from
beyond the Alps" were no longer interpreted as proving the intuition of the German
constitutionalist H. Heller, according to which fascist politico-constitutional grammar is
characterised by the absence of “static dogmatic values" (impossible to secure without
an anchor in a set of principles for Catholicism; from the concentration of value in the
political community considered in and of itself and disconnected from a standard that
transcends, and from a unavailable character that could not but lead to the granting of
concessions to political power from an unconditional freedom in order to build the
order)
79
.
The Italian Social Republic (Saló)
Apart from the vinténio, Italian fascism still would know another politico-constitutional
incarnation: the so-called Italian Social Republic. Before we close this first chapter on the
fascist "constitutional", it is appropriate to consider the Saló Republic in order to ascertain
to what extent it introduced continuity in relation to the constitutional-axiophonic
patterns we emphasised before.
domestic citizens of the Aryan race as employees; attend school in any order and degree (textbooks whose
authors were Jewish were also banned). They would be excluded from the armed forces, public
administration, the exercise of activities related to representations, trading in antiquities and art, the
printing industry, street trading; they were also prevented from publishing obituaries and entering names
in the phone book. Specific limits were established for their university tests. The possibility of revoking
citizenship granted to them after 1st January 1919 was admitted. In the context of Italian involvement in
the Second World War, from 1940, several provisions of the government would establish internment
measures for the expulsion of foreign Jews object.
76
Under the R.D.L. of 5th September 1938, No. 1390, people with Jewish parents were considered Jewish
along with those who professed to be part of the religion. Subsequently, the R.D.L. No. 1728, 1938, would
consider people Jewish if they were born from couples of mixed religions along with those belonging to the
Jewish religion on 1st October 1938. For this dimension of "constitutional fascist revolution" see S. Labriola,
la costituzione authoritaria Cit., pp. 269-271.
77
Aaron Gillette, Racial Theories in Fascist Italy, Routledge, London/New York, 2002.
78
The context in which they signed up included mores (abandonment of treatment in the second person
plural) and military-choreography (adoption of the Roman step) changes. Other changes were made to the
emanation of a new NFP status, a reordering of the youth organisation and education reform drafted by
Giuseppe Bottai (with the new Carta della Scuola of 1939).
79
Vide Hermann Heller, Europa y el Fascism, vers. Castilian Editorial España, Madrid, 1931.
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On 29th September 1943, "the operation of the new republican fascist State has been
initiated" (quoting the exact terms of an official communication of the day). Until its final
constitutional form was approved in a 'Constituent', the Duce would assume "the chief
functions of the new republican Fascist State"
80
. The fascist project should now take on
a new concrete form a "National State of work” but a fundamental axiophonic decision
by an integral and integrating (mono-archy) State continued to be at stake
81
. A look at
the constitutional project entitled the “Constitution of the Italian Social Republic", the
document destined to become the Constitution of the new Republic (but that did not
come into force) reveals it
82
.
The first two articles "recounted" the fascist idea of political community (a political
community taken as monistic and absorbent, and an end in itself). According to Article
1:
[T]he Italian nation is a political and economic organism in which its
strain of civilian, religious, linguistic, legal, ethical and cultural
characteristics are fully realised. It has life, will and superior ends in
power and durability to individuals, isolated or grouped, that at any
time are part of it.
Art. 2 specified:
[T]he Italian State is a social Republic. It is the full legal organisation
of the nation. The Italian Social Republic has as its supreme
purpose: the conquest and preservation of Italian freedom in the
world, as it unfolds and develops all of its powers and performs in
the international consortium, founded on justice, the civil mission
entrusted by God, marked by 27 centuries of its history and living
in the national consciousness of the well-being of working people,
through their moral and intellectual elevation, increasing the
country's wealth and its equitable distribution, due to the income of
each of the national community
83
.
In it, a declaration of rights and duties (Articles 89-101) was consecrated in which
individual rights were paradoxically given a genetic matrix, bidding an "objective"
national teleology. In fact, in the terms of Article 93:
80
About the Republic of Salò, see: Giorgio Bocca, La Repubblica di Mussolini Oscar Storia Mondadori, Milano
1994 reimp. 2009 pp 211-213; 155-170 and Guglielmo Negri, Il Quadro Costituzionale, Tempi and Istituti
della Libertà, Seconda edizione, Giuffrè, 1995, pp. 66 ff.
81
To use the expression - "Stato nazionale del lavoro - from the post-fascist Italian Social Movement.
82
This project can be viewed in G. Negri and S. Simoni, Le Costituzioni inattuate, Editore Colombo, Rome
1990. The manifesto, adopted by the first national congress of the Fascist Republican Party held in
Castelvecchio in Verona (the famous Verona Manifesto 17th November 1943), also contained indications of
constitutional politics.
83
The so-called Manifesto of Verona states paragraph 9 that the “base of the Social Republic and its main
object is manual, technical and intellectual work in all its manifestations". "Profit-sharing by workers” was
suggested in paragraph 6. Subsequently, Decree No. 375 of 12th February 1944 would give concrete steps
towards the socialisation of enterprises.
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Civil and political rights are granted to all citizens. All subjective
rights, public and private, involve the exercise of duty in accordance
with the national purpose from which they were granted. In this
respect the State guarantees and protects the exercise
84
.
Not missing the repetition of the "ingredient" of the religion and State: under Article 6
"the apostolic Roman Catholic religion is the only religion of the
Italian Social Republic"
85
.
The political order was now directly and immediately constructed from the figure of the
Duce, but in terms of its institutionalisation. The Duce institution was configured as the
central director of the State (vide Articles. 35 and SS), keeping, however, an organic
pluralism in the structuring of the powers and functions of the State. The Duce would
exercise executive power directly and through government (which was an autonomous
body, but with the Ministers and the Head of Government being appointed by it (vide
Articles 45 and 49-56). The legislature power would exercise it in collaboration with a
"Chamber of Labour Representatives' (Camera dei Rappresentanti del Lavoro), elected
through universal suffrage and representing working people (vide Articles 17-34); and
also with the Government Article 40
86
. Interestingly, the "symbolic" power of the
constitutionally consecrated Duce even included the power to grant titles of nobility
(Article 48), which seems unique from the point of view of constitutional history. It would
also envisage the existence of a Constituent Assembly defined as the representative of
the "living forces of the Nation", and built as an expression of state institutions and
societal organisations recognised by the State to which it would fit. To elect the Duce of
seven in seven years (and can only be re-elected once through the will of Mussolini),
constitutional law was changed and pronounced on great issues of national interest at
the request of Duce or (by a two-thirds majority) the House of Representatives (Articles
14-16).
Conclusions
Interwar regimes usually classified as “right-wing and non-democratic" stand out on the
map of modern politics, more precisely on the map of major politico- constitutional (and
religious) forms, from the identification of the same political community, considered in
and of itself, as the supreme good. In all these regimes the political community enjoyed
the founding status and order of the eminent good, though not in all, however, was an
absolute good constructed (think, for example, in certain "authoritarian
84
Point 10 of the Verona Manifesto read: "private property, the fruits of labour, individual savings and the
integration of the human personality are guaranteed by the State. It should not become a physical and
moral disintegration of the personality of other men through labour exploitation".
85
In accordance with Articles 7 and 8 other religions were allowed, since they do not observe principles and
rites contrary to "public order and morality"; public worship would be allowed, except limitations and
responsibilities established by law. The Manifesto of Verona stated that the "religion of the Republic is the
Roman Catholic. Any other worship that does not contrast with the law is respected”.
86
It is responsible for the power to appoint judges, and the law to organise judicial organisation (giurisdizione)
- vide art. 61 ff.
JANUS.NET, e-journal of International Relations
e-ISSN: 1647-7251
Vol. 7, Nº. 2 (November 2016-April 2017), pp. 64-89
On the constitutional order in/of Italian fascism
Pedro Velez
89
constitutionalisms" still carrying an ingredient of liberal "political metaphysics"), and
some politico-constitutional orders were structured or limited by reference to a Christian-
Catholic rule beyond the political (the so-called Austrian State or the second Francoism,
for example)
87
.
The fascist regime can be said to have raised the political community to a true absolutum,
having been considered as something of unconditionally valuable and an omni-
comprehensive ordering reference. As seen before, the process of fundamental
(re)institutionalisation of the fascist regime defined and followed an eminently national-
state idea; moreover, it built a public orthodoxy in which the State figured as an absolute
principle; in the field of negotiations between the political and the (traditional) religious
vital for the crystallisation of the regime of self-referentiality of the fascist
principology, its ultima ratio character became clear
88
. It was as if the theme that was
behind the new constitutional experiences of the interwar period had been stated here,
nakedly, as the absolute and sole rector.
Given its universal-civilizational character, it is possible to speculate whether Italian
fascism would have not built, at least virtually or vocationally, one of the new grammars
of the collective existence of a more or less pure type that tended to crystallise in
modernity, one of the projects of
“new consensus on good to replace the medieval consensus on
good"
89
.
87
On this see also, in addition to our doctoral dissertation (Pedro Velez, Constitution and Transcendence: the
case of community regimes of the interwar period), Pedro Velez, On the modern secular-religious City:
theologico-political mapping and prospective, in Foreign affairs, No. 18, 2010, pp. 217-238 -
http://idi.mne.pt/images/rev_ne/2010_12_n_18.pdf .
88
Here and there, it seems to point, more or less explicitly, to a characterisation of the essence of the Italian
fascist regime as a superlative updating the project of the idea of State - vide above: Marcel Gauchet, À
l'épreuve des totalitarismes... Cit., Pp. 348 ff. (Chapter VIII, «Le fascisme en lui-même of quête»); David
D. Roberts, The totalitarian experiment in twentieth-century Europe, op. cit., pp. 271 ff. Also in the interwar
literature: vide Rudolf Smend, Constitucion y Derecho Constitutional, Centro de Estudios Constitucionales,
Madrid, 1985. For a topography of views about Italian fascism, see Emilio Gentile, Qu'est-ce que le fascisme?
Histoire et interpretation, French version, Gallimard, Paris, 2004 maxime p. 67 ff.
89
In order to use expressions and intuitions from William T. Cavanaugh in Killing For The Telephone
Company: Why The Nation-State Is Not The Keeper Of The Common Good, in Modern Theology, vol. 20,
No. 2, 2004, p. 418, note 59.