Relations between party and state Flashcards

1
Q

How did the party lose its previous dynamism?

A

It became a bloated bureaucracy offering secure, undemanding jobs to fascist supporters

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2
Q

What did it still have despite this?

A

A role in M’s state

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3
Q

What did he hope that the party could do?

A

Tranform ordinary Italians into obedient, disciplined fascists

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4
Q

What did he do in pursuit of this?

A

Gave it a significant role, particularly in the areas of leisure, education and propaganda

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5
Q

What did the PNF therefore come to represent?

A

A rival authority to the institutions of state

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6
Q

What was the result of this?

A

There were tensions and arguements between party organisations and government departments

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7
Q

How was there disagreement over the fascist youth group?

A

Should the OMB be controlled by the party or by the government’s ministry of education?

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8
Q

How did a similar question take place over leisure?

A

There was a question over who should run the organisation for adult leisure activities

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9
Q

What was the organisation

A

The Dopolavaro

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10
Q

What does Dopolavaro translate to?

A

After work

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11
Q

How was there a rivalry in terms of industry?

A

There was a rivalry between the government economics ministry and the fascist bureaucracy controlling the new fascist Corporations

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12
Q

Where was there rivalry in the armed forces?

A

Between the fascist militia and the regular army

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13
Q

Where did the rivarly stem from?

A

The regular army rejected the idea that the blackshirts were of equal status to them. They also argued about the distribution of weapons between them

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14
Q

What was this rivalry not confined to?

A

National politics

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15
Q

Explain this

A

In the provinces local party secretaries would compete with provincial prefects who, according to the Ministry of the Interior in Rome, had responsibility for local government

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16
Q

How did conflicts like this benefit M?

A

Because in these disputes over jurisdiction both sides looked to him to solve the disputes, giving him great power

17
Q

Give an example of him favouring the party

A

In 1927 he transferred control over the dopolavaro organisation from the Ministry of National Economy to the party

18
Q

Give an example of him favouring the state

A

In 1929 he took the youth organisation (OMB) out of the hands of the party and handed control to the Ministry of National Education

19
Q

What was the downside of these disputes?

A

Disputes between party organisations and government departments made government slow and inefficient

20
Q

Why was this?

A

Delays were unavoidable as so many matters awaited the personal decision of man who, despite his pretence, did not work 20 hours a day

21
Q

How did M make matters worse?

A

Because of his determination that he should personally occupy the most important ministries of state

22
Q

How was decision making poor?

A

They were often taken without proper thought or consultation

23
Q

Give an example of M doing this

A

When he selected the air force’s new fighter plane after only a most cursory glance at the relevant info

24
Q

What did his tenure of so many ministries mean?

A

That he found it impossible to ensure that his decisions were actually being carried out as he intended

25
Q

What can we therefore conclude about fascist government?

A

That it was not nearly as streamlined and efficient as M and his foreign admirers liked to suggest

26
Q

What undermined M’s position of supreme power?

A

Because below him there was all too often confusion, delay and incompetence

27
Q
A