Antonio Malito
Antonio Raffaelle Malito | |
---|---|
President of Adamantina | |
Preceded by | Brancaleone Polino |
Succeeded by | Ginevra Malito |
Vice President of Adamantina | |
President | Brancaleone Polino |
Preceded by | Sosteneo Neglia |
Succeeded by | Ginevra Malito |
Chairman of the Solidarista Party | |
Deputy | Domezio Bartone |
Succeeded by | Ginevra Malito |
President of the CLA–AIO | |
Preceded by | Corbiniano Aresco |
Succeeded by | Gianluigi Pierotti |
Personal details | |
Born | Antonio Raffaelle Malito September 8, 1910 Porto Pellegrini |
Citizenship | Adamantina |
Political party | Solidarista Party |
Spouse | Ginevra Malito (m. 1935) |
Children | 7 |
Alma mater | Military Academy of the Adamantine Army |
Occupation | Soldier, politican |
Antonio Raffaelle Malito (born 8 September 1910 – August 21 1989) was Adamantine general and politican. Serving as the Secretary of the Interior and as the Vice President of Adamantina from 1944 to 1948 he was elected President of Adamantina two times, serving from 1949 to 1953, when he was deposed by the Cabala delle Ombre. Malito was reelected in 1976 during the Asterian Spring, serving until his death in August 1989.
During his presidential terms, Malito was supported by his life-long wife Ginevra Malito, who served as his vice president and succeeded him after his death. Both were popular among the Adamantine working class. Malito worked to dignify labor and alleviate poverty throughout the country, and was widely supported by the institutionalized power of organized labor. From 1977 to 1989 he served as the President of the Confederation of Labor and Assembly of Industrial Organizations (CLA–AIO), and from 1949 to 1989 served as the Chairman of the Solidarista Party. During the military Junta of the Cabala delle Ombre, his party and supporters were banned from government, forcing many into exile. Throughout his term as president, the country saw periods of increased industrialization and prosperity, although during his last term the economy began to decline into recession.
Considered by many within political academia as a controversial figure, he and his wife are regarded as icons by those within the Solidarista Party.
Early life and education
Antonio Raffaelle Malito was born in Porto Pellegrini, Federal District of Porto Pellegrini, on 8 September 1910. He was the son of Edgardo Malito and Liviana Malito. The Malito family descends from Carvagna in central Etruria, from which is great-grandfather emigrated in the 1840s. Malito also had ancestral connections with Carinthia, Novalia and Gaullica. His parents, both came from a long lineage of stevedores, who worked in the ports of Etruria and later Adamantina. Antonio grew up with three bothers and four sisters in a small home in the neighborhood of Aventijn, Porto Pellegrini.
Malito's father worked at the Port of Pellegrini, the predecessor of the Port of Pellegrini and Prosperita. Malito attended one of Porto Pellegrini's most prestigious public schools, Sangermano Polytechnic where he excelled in mathematics. He was not among the more popular Sangermano students, who were considered more gifted academically and was considered by his instructors as rebellious. Around the age of 14 he was enrolled into the Junior Military Academy of Porto Pellegrini, which secured him a path to attend the Military Academy of the Adamantine Army in Salination. Malito's discipline improved and was inducted into the Order of the Crisantemo, a exclusive military fraternity at the academy. During his junior year he became the editor-in-chief of the school's daily newspaper, the Academy Daily. During his time as editor-in-chief, Malito maintained a strong nationalistic and conservative outlook in relation to domestic and foreign affairs. Antonio graduated from the Military Academy in 1931 with B.A in history and was commissioned into the Adamantine Army at the age of 21.
Malito began his military career as a artillery officer at a post in Cesaro, Sarno. While at post, Malito joined the local party apparatus of the National Front, as the party was supportive of the military's irredentist desire to incorporate Gapolania as the 18th province of the republic. Due to his proximity to the Gapolanian border, he oversaw several military war games simulating an invasion of the neighboring country. In 1933 he believed that Adamantina would incorporate Gapolania by 1950. In 1934, roughly 3 years after his posting, Malito was instructed to quell labor unrest in Sarno's mining community of Montevecchio. After failing to mediate the dispute, and reluctance to fire upon protestors, he was relieved of his command of Cesaro by General Ivanoe Martucci and was relocated to Porto Pellegrini where he was brought on to preform staff duties.