SPECIAL REPORT OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE THE QUESTION OF REGIONAL ADMINISTRATIONS IN ITALY

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CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1
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19 April 1963 OCI No. 0276/63C Copy No. 73 SPECIAL REPORT elease 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1 OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE THE QUESTION OF REGIONAL ADMINISTRATIONS IN ITALY CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY I/CDF Pages 1, SECRET GROUP I Excluded from automatic downgrading anddeclossification Approved For R ease 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A4000050004-1 THIS MATERIAL CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECT- ING THE NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES WITHIN THE MEANING OF THE ESPIONAGE LAWS, TITLE 18, USC, SECTIONS 793 AND 794, THE TRANSMIS- SION OR REVELATION OF WHICH IN ANY MANNER TO AN UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW. 1)1S SFMINATION CONTROLS If marked with specific dissemination controls in accordance with the provisions of DCID 1/7, the document must be handled within the framework of the limitation so imposed. Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1 AW 19 April 1963 THE QUESTION OF REGIONAL ADMINISTRATIONS IN ITALY Italy's 1947 constitution provides for the establishment of regional administrations throughout the country. The Democratic Socialists and the Republicans, cabinet partners of Premier Fanfani's Christian Democratic Party, as well as Pietro Nenni's Italian Socialist Party (PSI), on which the present center-left government depends for parliamentary support, have insisted that the long-delayed regional administrations be established by the next Parliament. The enacting legislation has heretofore been blocked on the ground that such a system would bring the Communists'to power in their areas of local strength. However, Nenrd has indicated privately that the PSI would participate in regional governments with its present coalition partners rather than with the Communists, even in those regions where Socialists and Communists together would have a majority. The regional administrati.gn questionihas-not been an important issue in the current election campaign, but it could emerge as one of the political stumbling blocks in the formation of a new cabinet. The constitution drawn up for the new Italian Republic in 1947 divided the country into 19 regions, possessing a degree of local autonomy. Although the Christian Democrats had orginally been strong proponents of regional autonomy, a series of postwar governments led by them delayed action except with respect to special autonomy for the islands of Sicily and Sardinia and for two border areas largely populated by`non-Italians. Leg- islation setting up the third border region has now been passed by the Fanfani government. In 1962, as a quid pro quo for Socialist parliamentary support, Fanfani's cabinet pre- sented Parliament with measures designed to implement the regional provisions of the constitution. Early in 1963, however, the SECRET Christian Democrats nearly precipitated a. cabinet crisis by refusing to push for legis- lation in the pre-election Parliament. Party leaders feared right-wing defections if they proceeded before the PSI publicly spells out Nenni's confidential commitment not to form regional governments. with the Communists. The Christian Democrats' two cabinet partners announced at the close of Parliament that they would withdraw from the coalition if regional legis- lation is not carried out after the April national elections. Subsequently discussion has largely died out. Background Because of geographic dif- ferences and long experience Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1 SE CRE T Approved For R se 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AA4000050004-1 LOMBARDY Milan Br~a~ia0 EMILIAROMAGNA eoinan SAN MARINO Af9 0A.- 1 P,rple Ti BRIA Special region Regione boundary 50 100 Statute Miles- UNCLASSIFIED mpm OPor?nza BASILICATA ,~Ta~a AA Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 %0 %0 SECRET with foreign administration of different sections of the penin- sula, Italians have tended to develop local rather than national allegiances. The 19th-century liberals who brought about the unification of Italy's numerous principalities and states had been afraid of region- alism, and a Napoleonic system of centralized government was instituted by Piedmont, the mother region. Subsequently, the 20th-century liberals, having suffered under the cen- tralized government of Mussolini, saw regional powers as a device by which to thwart future would- be dictators from Rome. When the Constituent As- sembly met in 1946 to draft a constitution for the new republic, there was general agreement in favor of recognizing historic and distinctive geographic areas and administrative units to re- duce the power of the national government and maintain stability in the event of its collapse. Another factor which encouraged the assembly to create the regions and to grant them some autonomy was the fear of losing territory: to keep the Aosta Valley in northwest Italy from going to France, the province of Bolzano in the region of the Alto Adige River from being returned to the Austrian South Tirol, and to draw the most favorable frontier possible at the Yugoslav border. In addition, by the end of World War II leaders from the southern island of Sicily were agitating vigorously for independence. Accordingly, special grants of autonomy were made--first to Sicily by means of a hastily conceived charter in 1946, and two years later to the French- speaking Aosta Valley, to the German-speaking Trentino - Alto Adige area, and to the island of Sardinia. The present Fanfani government has recently passed legislation to set up the Friuli - Venezia Giulia region in the partly Slavic area of northeast Italy, as provided by the con- stitution. Regional Powers Envisaged The Constituent Assembly had apparently been unwilling to grant to the main parts of Italy the degree of autonomy that its policy of appeasement made advisable for the periphery and the constitution denied special privileges to the four- teen regions remaining on the books. In 1953 a measure setting up the institutions and general powers of these regions was enacted but no provision was made for election of administra- tive regional councils. The effective difference between the autonomy granted the special regions and that which would be given the other 14 is not yet clear. However, one difference is that the special regions have legislative powers, whereas the rest would have power only to concur in national legislation. In Sicily, the special region with the greatest degree of local autonomy, the Rome SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 W SECRET government retains power to dissolve the regional assembly, but the regional government has control over even the national police forces in the area. The ordinary regions would have control over only their local police forces, and the state would have a strong check on them through the national supreme court and in other ways (see inset below). Like other units of local government in Italy, the re- gions would have limited direct taxing power and percentages of national taxes would be turned over to them. The national government has been extremely liberal in the case of the four special regions already in operation. The size of the subsidies to the four operating regions vary, however,'as do the con- stitutional formulae for their As provided in principle by the Constitution of 1947, and to be clarified by enabling legislation, each of the 14 regions would elect its own regional council. The council would elect an executive committee, or giunta, which would in turn choose a-regional president. This regional government would supervise local economic and police functions-and urban affairs, and have re- sponsibility for any changes in city and regional geo- graphic boundaries. Rome would retain the following checks on these administrations: the Italian ConstitutionalCourt would pass on the constitutionality of regional laws; the President of the Republic would have power to dissolve the regional councils; the government's commissioner in each region would report to Rome on infractions of regional and national law; the national police would retain authority to supersede local; police powers. calculation. An Italian econ- omist has estimated that if the Trentino - Alto Adige formula were applied uniformly on a country-wide basis the regions world be receiving 10 to 19 percent of the state's annual income. If the Sicilian formula for subsidies should be applied, however, the regions would be spending 61 to 62 percent of the annual Italian national income. North Italy's Piedmont, on the other hand, is one of two or three which give the state more revenue than they receive from it. After some 15 years during which four regional governments have been in operation, it is difficult to discern a definite pattern in the way these attempts at decentralization are evolving. The Val d'Aosta government ap- pears to have prospered, and to have evolved into what some observers allude to as "a sober government not unlike that of a Swiss canton." The Sardinian regional government appears also to have been run more smoothly than Sicily, although an eco- nomic development plan for the area did not get under way until it was pushed by the present national parliament. Trentino - Alto Adige, set up as a result of a treaty with Austria, appears to have been well administered, but ethnic animosities have led to a run- ning dispute with Austria. The least successful of the regional governments has been that of Sicily, where defections by right-wing Christian Democrats brought about a situation pro- viding the Communists with some SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1 fto SECRET success in blocking efforts to isolate them politically. Points of Controversy Opponents of the regional system have continued to declare that it will lead to consolidation of control by the Communists in their areas of strength.. Others are concerned over the possi- bility of deadlocks in reg- ional governments because of the possible lack of a polit- ical majority as has been the case in various local governments. Others object to interposition of another bureaucratic layer in a red- tape-ridden country, and to the expense entailed. Pro- ponents of the regional govern- ment stress the need for democratic decentralization in a tradionally overcentral- ized state, and for greater government awareness of regional problems. They be- lieve it will be possible to coordinate the activities of the regions through the center- left government's new com- mission for economic planning, Proponents of the regional system point to Nenni's offer to form regional administra- tions along the lines of the present center-left national government and of those now obtaining in most key cities-- i.e., alliances including Christian Democrats and So- cialists, and excluding the Socialists' former partners, the Communists. They urge that such a situation would loosen the Communist hold on areas where Socialist support has hitherto been an important factor in Communist strength. The most important part of the enabling legislation is that relating to financing. This provides that direct revenues will derive from taxes now levied by the townships, while funds provided by the national government would come from real estate and certain indirect taxes and fees, presumably still to be collected by Rome, with distribution based generally on the sums the state now spends in each region for various ser- vices. Budget Minister La Malfa, sponsor of this measure and one of the strongest sup- porters of regional administration, insists that financing the re- gions would not involve new ex- pense because the state will give only what it already spends. He claims that annual expense for the regions will amount to about 200 billion lire ($320 million), rather than 800 billion as oppo- nents charge. With regard to a new bureauc- racy, La Malfa figures "maximum personnel" at some eight thousand. He believes the task of the gov- ernment's new commission for co- ordinated economic planning, which he heads ex officio, would be facilitated by a regional system which will point up area problems needing government action. Prospects The areas where special autonomy is already in effect are too specialized in character to offer a clue as to the success SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A004000050004-1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 *Bpi SECRET or failure of applying some- what less autonomist regional administration'to the rest of the country. If, as now seems likely, another center-left government is formed again after the election, pressures on the Christian Democrats by their parliamentary partners may re- sult in the creation of re- gional administrations through- out Italy,, although in view of the general lull of public in- terest in the matter, the coali- tion parties may work out some kind of watered-down compromise SECRET 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1 Approved For Rase 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927A4000050004-1 SECRET SECRET Approved For Release 2006/09/27: CIA-RDP79-00927AO04000050004-1