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9 - The allargamento debate, 1895–1897

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2009

Jonathan Morris
Affiliation:
University College London
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Summary

During the last five years of the nineteenth century, both city and shopkeeper politics in Milan passed through their most turbulent phase since the flight of the Austrians in 1859. The municipality's search for a way to raise the revenue necessary to provide amenities for the city's burgeoning population, at a time when rapid inflation masked the beginnings of an economic recovery, lay at the root of the problem, and the system of the interno and esterno again came under threat. Milan's situation contributed to the ‘end-of-century’ crisis in which the legitimacy of Italy's existing political system was challenged by a combination of public disorder, economic distress and the development of viable political alternatives on the left. Disagreements over the best strategies to adopt in these circumstances led to the emergence of several divisions in the esercenti camp, reflected by the growth in shopkeeper splinter groups and news-sheets shown in Tables 9.1 and 9.2.

ESERCENTI POLITICS, 1895–6

The first of these disputes was that between the Federation and L'Esercente, which, it will be recalled, developed during the lead-up to the elections of 1895. At the heart of the issue lay the question of the movement's political autonomy. The newspaper attacked the Federation as a nest of Republicans, asserting that it would never succeed in eliminating cooperative privileges whilst it remained so closely allied to the Democratic bloc.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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