Acerbo Law

The Acerbo Law was a 1923 electoral law forced through the Italian Parliament - if a party gained 25 percent of the votes, they gained 2/3 of the seats. After the 1924 election, this method gave Benito Mussolini a huge majority. The socialists didn't recogize this law and didn't participate in the government, which was fine with the fascists. Later, socialist leaders, such as Giacomo Matteotti, were assasinated. The importance of this law is that it enabled the fascists to establish a political base in the Italian parliament, which Mussolini used to create a dictatorship.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
battle royal
bolyai (crater)
florida midland railroad (current)
john newland maffitt
bootlace tie
tara (buddhist)
brouwer (crater)
arthur e. raymond
plouzec
campanus (crater)
sant'antonio di ranverso
c. mayer (crater)
'abd al rahman abnudi
larry the cable guy
mickey's philharmagic
moa nalo
latitude and longitude of airports near u.s. cities
augmented truncated tetrahedron
morphosis
prometheus (comics)
biratnagar
the man in the arena
columbus day storm of 1962
convento de san francisco
jaime sabines
la force
united airlines destinations
homology (sociology)
jean baptiste louis gros
california academy of mathematics and science
cape turnagain
ciccone
adventures in foam
porangahau river
porangahau
kosice attack
ruahine range
calamus (palm genus)
belianis
soap bark tree
trivial objections
alex kaleta
codicil
ayesha qaddafi