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Fernando Tambroni

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President
  
Giovanni Gronchi

Preceded by
  
Giuseppe Medici

Preceded by
  
Antonio Segni

Name
  
Fernando Tambroni


Preceded by
  
Mario Scelba

Role
  
Politician

Succeeded by
  
Amintore Fanfani

Fernando Tambroni I 20 pi giovani presidenti del Consiglio Il Post

Prime Minister
  
Antonio Segni Adone Zoli Amintore Fanfani

Died
  
February 18, 1963, Rome, Italy

Political party
  
Italian People's Party, National Fascist Party, Christian Democracy

Prime Minister
  
Antonio Segni Himself

Fernando Tambroni Armaroli (25 November 1901 – 18 February 1963) was a right-wing Italian politician of the Christian Democratic Party. He was a lawyer, a prominent supporter of law and order policies, and for a brief time in 1960, the 36th Prime Minister of Italy. His role as prime minister is best remembered for the riots which resulted from the possibility that he might look to the Movimento Sociale Italiano for support against the parliamentary left.

Fernando Tambroni Per i morti di Reggio Emilia il tragico luglio di

Biography

Fernando Tambroni 1960 Sarappa Antonio

Tambroni was born in Ascoli Piceno (Marche).

Fernando Tambroni People Child Canada 18941908 HD Stock Video 459

He was a member of the Italian Constituent Assembly and was later elected to the new Italian Chamber of Deputies in 1948-1958. In 1953, he was Minister of Merchant Marine, a position he held under two more governments until 1954. The following year, he was Minister of the Interior under the first government of Antonio Segni, being confirmed under the following ones, led by Adone Zoli and Amintore Fanfani respectively. In 1959, again under Segni, he was Minister of Economy.

Fernando Tambroni wwwinternogovitsitesdefaultfilesbasicpage

In 1960, sponsored by President Giovanni Gronchi, he formed the Tambroni Cabinet and became Prime Minister. Tambroni's politics soon appeared strongly right-wing: having abandoned the alliance with the Italian Socialist Party, he formed a minority government with support from the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI), liberals and monarchists.

Fernando Tambroni 1958 1963 I governo Tambroni

On 21 May 1960, a rally led by Communist deputy Giancarlo Pajetta was dissolved by the police with support from the government, causing riots.

Fernando Tambroni Fernando Tambroni Armaroli Centro Studi Malfatti

On 15 June, the Minister of Culture Umberto Tupini announced plans to censor all films with "scandalous subjects, harmful for the consciousness of Italians", including Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita.

The most controversial decision of his mandate, however, was the permission to MSI to hold its national congress in Genoa, one of the capitals of Italian Resistance against Fascism. This move was considered a further and unacceptable opening to the former Fascists of the doors of the government. On 30 June 1960, a large demonstration summoned by the left-wing CGIL trade union and by other leftist forces in the streets of Genoa was heavily suppressed by the Italian police. Other popular demonstrations in Reggio Emilia, Rome, Palermo, Catania, Licata again saw violent intervention by the police, causing several deaths. Eventually, after grievances coming also from some sectors of Democrazia Cristiana, Tambroni was forced to resign, having been in charge only 116 days.

He died a few years later in Rome due to cardiac arrest.

References

Fernando Tambroni Wikipedia