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Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
Elections, Plebiscitary Elections, and
Plebiscites in Fascist Italy and
Nazi-Germany: Comparative Perspectives
Enzo Fimiani
“Force and Consensus”
In this essay I analyze the historical significance of both plebiscitary experi-
ences and electoral practices of a plebiscitary nature in Fascist Italy and
Nazi Germany.1
If there is no doubt that the very high frequency of plebiscitary-elec-
toral voting was largely determined by the suffocating nature of the totali-
tarian dictatorship, it is also important to bear in mind that these systems
of power were able, in some way, to anticipate the moods, ambitions and
expectations of a fair proportion of the people. Neither Fascism nor Na-
tional Socialism, in fact, can be assessed solely in terms of their political
violence, juridical illegalities or institutional corruption, and not even in
terms of the ideological constraints that they imposed or their inherent
ability to spread their propaganda through technologically-advanced forms
of mass communication. The positive responses in the plebiscites also
pointed to the population’s approval of the myths of nationalism or of
patriotic redemption in the face of previous humiliations in the course of
history (the
shame
of Versailles for Germany, the “
vittoria mutilata
” for Italy after the First World War). So, to succeed and to achieve totalitarian levels
of participation, elections and plebiscites needed not only the mere praxis
of power. The plebiscite ballot boxes, overflowing with
Sì
and
Ja
, represented well this
mixture
in the essence of right-wing dictatorial power, which we could define—using the words of the Italian
Duce
himself—as a
perverse mixture of “force and consensus” (Mussolini 1923). As has been
written of Fascism, “the regime organized consensus, oppressed and at the
same time made the people participate […]. This was typical of an authori-
——————
1 My thanks to: Paul Corner, for his friendship; Barbara Lewis (teacher and language scholar, Pescara, Italy), who translated this essay from Italian into English; John Guerin (Kaplan School, Dublin), who was very patient with my English...
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E N Z O F I M I A N I
tarian mass regime, subduing the individual to the state and to his boss and
making him participate all the same, while giving him space” (Foa 1996,
126, 131). In other words, the plebiscitary exercise of the right to vote was
an emblematic paradigm of
participation
in political life under totalitarianism.
Form of Regime, Form of Vote: Meanings and Functions
of Nazi-Fascist Plebiscitary Votes
The plebiscitary experiences and electoral practices of a plebiscitary nature
under the two regimes have not received the attention they deserve from
international historiography. In one of the best works on the relations
between German totalitarianism and the people, Gellately has stressed that
historians “are used to ignoring the subsequent elections and plebiscites
under Hitler’s dictatorship” (Gellately 2002, 15). In Italy, the principal
scholar of Germany’s history recently wrote that “until now, the problem
of the plebiscites […] has only been dealt with marginally by the wealth of
literature available on Hitler’s regime” (Corni 2010, 179). As far as Fascism
is concerned, after a long silence, historians only began to turn their atten-
tion to its plebiscites some ten or twelve years ago.
This lack of interest has almost always been determined by
negative preju-
dice
, so to speak, towards plebiscites in general. It was generally thought that there was little point in studying them as they always turned out, in
European history, to be mere rituals for illiberal regimes, occasions for
celebration, and predictable manifestations of consensus for the political
system in power. Moreover, the regime’s plebiscitary successes were put
down largely to coercion.
In effect, the electoral and plebiscitary dates, that marked the lives of
the German and Italian peoples between the two World Wars took on
many important meanings and functions for the political dynamics of the
two regimes that we cannot afford to ignore. On the one hand, they
marked out and emphasized some of the main emblematic moments of the
respective totalitarian experiences, albeit with their quite distinct character-
istics. Elections for the two parliaments, and plebiscites for the collective
ratification of political decisions already taken in practice by the two gov-
ernments, now give us another opportunity to measure, among other
E L E C T I O N S , P L E B I S C I T A R Y E L E C T I O N S , A N D P L E B I S C I T E S
233
things, the ability of profoundly non-democratic regimes to control and
mobilize the
masses
by using a typical instrument of democratic tradition, the right to vote. On the other hand, they had the function of conferring a
kind of “chrism” to the Fascist and Nazi powers,
legitimizing
them in some way from the bottom upwards, and often contributing to
legalizing
formally the more obvious aspects of their illegality (especially but not only in respect of international public opinion).
The elections and plebiscites also constituted authentic paradigms of
the modern totalitarian plebiscite, which, in its respective propaganda cam-
paigns, produced some of its highest expressions of violence, persuasion
and invasiveness in forms that included technology and advertising, the
extraordinary power of the party machines, the weight of both psychologi-
cal and physical coercion, and lastly the ability to gain the electoral support
of a substantial portion of Italians and Germans on topics of broad popu-
lar appeal. Moreover, they had an additional function, which helps us “to
look totalitarianism in the face” (Ungari 1963, 11). For Fascism and Na-
zism, the numbers achieved in the results of elections and plebiscites were
only of relative importance (although the two regimes threw all they had
into achieving the maximum percentage of affirmative and, indeed, plebi-
scitary votes). Electoral experiences of this kind, putting aside the differ-
ences between Italian and German history, are revealed as being something
that went far beyond the tally of the ballot papers. They also became a
symbolic fact, a
plastic
testimony of the link between the
new
power and popular consensus.
We can say, ultimately, that the ten elections and plebiscites that were
held in Italy, Germany and in some German-speaking areas between 1924
and 1938 are a reliable yardstick for us. They enable us to comprehend
better, in comparative terms, the two systems and to observe their relation-
ships with the contradictions of political modernity.
Elections, Plebiscitary Elections and Plebiscites:
Questions of History and Definitions
When Fascism and Nazism used the plebiscite, an instrument, which al-
lowed a government to appeal to the people to express themselves with a
Yes
or
No
on a particular issue, already had a long history, which began in
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E N Z O F I M I A N I
the French Revolution. The modern plebiscite soon revealed its ability to
become a phenomenon of European dimensions over the next two centu-
ries (Fimiani 2010). It has been used by a number of nations and has
crossed several frontiers of political thought, revealing itself as a useful
means for different sorts of regimes to legitimize, consolidate or legalize
themselves, and to gain in this way a gloss of
democracy
. Numerous forms of electoral competitions “without choice” have revealed a close relationship
with plebiscites proper. Fascism and Nazism, therefore, did not invent the
plebiscitary tradition; rather, they
reinterpreted
a plebiscitary past with methods characteristic of modern dictatorships.
Beside the
plebiscite
, then, the two regimes made use of other instru-
ments of
electoral
consultation of the people, which, in many ways, were similar enough to plebiscites to allow us to consider them side-by-side in a
comparative analysis of
Nazi-Fascist
plebiscitarianism. The
elections proper
, in a juridical sense, both in Italy (in 1924) and Germany (two in 1933 and two
in 1938, on the
Anschluss
and the Sudetenland issue),2
always
took on a
de
facto
plebiscitary nature and were aimed at winning approval for the regime in a general sense, beyond the political contingencies for which they had
been called. Alongside these specific electoral experiences,
hybrid forms
of polls were tried out, which we could term
plebiscite-elections
(the Italian elections of 1929 and 1934; the German one of 1936 on the Rhine issue). The
three forms of election under study constitute, from a historical and inter-
pretative point of view, a fascinating mixture for the scientific study of a
crucial point—the more or less real commitment to the dictatorships of
the twentieth century.
At first sight, the sheer numbers bring out substantial differences be-
tween Fascism and National Socialism. Fascist plebiscites emerge as feeble
compared to Nazi ones. Only two plebiscites were held in Italy during the
Fascist dictatorship: on March 24, 1929 and March 25, 1934. To these, we
should add the general elections, still formally with more than one party,
which were held on April6, 1924: they were celebrated not so much as an