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GIOVANNI See also: Italian statesman, was See also: born at See also: Mondovi on the 27th of See also: October 1842
.
After a rapid career in the See also: financial administration he was, in 1882, appointed councillor of See also: state and elected to parliament
.
As deputy he chiefly acquired prominence by attacks on See also: Magliani, See also: treasury See also: minister in the See also: Depretis See also: cabinet, and on the 9th of See also: March 1889 was himself selected as treasury minister by
See also: Crispi
.
On the fall of the Rudini cabinet in May 1892, See also: Giolitti, with the help of a See also: court clique, succeeded to the premiership
.
His See also: term of office was marked by misfortune and misgovernment
.
The See also: building crisis and the commercial rupture with See also: France had impaired the situation of the state See also: banks, of which one, the Banca See also: Romana, had been further undermined by maladministration
.
A See also: bank See also: law, passed by Giolitti failed to effect an improvement
.
More-over, he irritated public opinion by raising to senatorial See also: rank the director-general of the Banca Romana, Signor Tanlongo, whose irregular practices had become a byword
.
The senate declined to admit Tanlongo, whom Giolitti, in consequence of an interpellation in parliament upon the condition of the Banca Romana, was obliged to arrest and prosecute
.
During the See also: prosecution Giolitti abused his position as premier to abstract documents bearing on the See also: case
.
Simultaneously a See also: parliamentary commission of inquiry investigated the condition of the state banks
.
Its report, though acquitting Giolitti of See also: personal dishonesty, proved disastrous to his See also: political position, and obliged him to resign
.
His fall See also: left the finances of the state disorganized, the See also: pensions fund depleted, See also: diplomatic relations with France strained in consequence of the See also: massacre of Italian workmen at Aigues-Mortes, and See also: Sicily and the Lunigiana in a state of revolt, which he had proved impotent to suppress
.
After his resignation he was impeached for abuse of power as minister, but the supreme court quashed the impeachment by denying the competence of the ordinary tribunals to See also: judge ministerial acts
.
For several years he was compelled to See also: play a passive See also: part, having lost all See also: credit
.
But by keeping in the background and giving public opinion See also: time to forget his past, as well as by parliamentary intrigue, he gradually regained much of his former influence
.
He made capital of the Socialist agitation and of the repression to which other statesmen resorted, and gave the See also: agitators to understand that were he premier they would be allowed a See also: free See also: hand
.
Thus he gained their favour, and on the fall of the See also: Pelloux cabinet he became minister of the Interior in See also: Zanardelli's administration, of which he was the real See also: head
.
His policy of never interfering in strikes and leaving even violent demonstrations undisturbed at first proved successful, but indiscipline and disorder See also: grew to such a See also: pitch that Zanardelli, already in See also: bad See also: health, resigned, and Giolitti succeeded him as See also: prime minister (See also: November 1903)
.
But during his tenure of office he, too, had to resort to strong See also: measures in repressing some serious disorders in various parts of See also: Italy, and thus he lost the favour of the Socialists
.
In March 1905, feeling himself no longer secure, he resigned, indicating Fortis as his successor
.
When See also: Sonnino became premier in See also: February 1906, Giolitti did not openly oppose him, but his followers did, and Sonnino was defeated in May, Giolitti becoming prime minister once more
.
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