On the Whit Monday holiday I made a trip to #Rijeka Croatia (formerly Italian #Fiume).
This fascinating city is often called “the birthplace of Italian Fascism”. I wrote a screenplay about it at university so I wanted to visit.
The interwar period here has a complex legacy.
Fiume was part of 🇦🇹🇭🇺Empire and served as the only Hungarian port. After WW1 it was given to Yugoslavia despite having a majority Italian population.
Italian poet Gabriele D’Annunzio invaded the city and made himself dictator. They were filming a movie about him during my visit
D’Annunzio’s “Italian Regency of Carnaro” lasted 1919 to 1920. The Kingdom of Italy opposed it and said it should be given back to Yugoslavia.
A constitution was adopted that later served as a basis for Mussolini’s fascists. D’Annunzio’s ideals and techniques were later emulated
The constitution established a corporatist state, with nine corporations representing different sectors of the economy. Membership was mandatory.
There was a symbolic 10th corporation to represent “superior individuals”. Legislative power was held by a bicameral legislature.
D’Annunzio has been called “the John the Baptist of Italian Fascism” because he invented much of the ritual during his Fiume dictatorship.
He gave theatrical balcony addresses from here at the governor’s palace and used Roman iconography. He also had blackshirted followers.
D’Annunzio’s ultimate goal was not to have his own independent dictatorship but for the territory’s annexation to Italy.
But the Italian government of the time remained loyal to the peace treaty and did not want to upset the balance.
At Christmas 1920 the Italian army invaded. D’Annunzio and his irregulars surrendered.
Italy then relinquished control of the city and the independent Free State of Fiume was established. The politics of the city-state changed dramatically, from nationalist to internationalist.
The Free State of Fiume lasted 1920 to 1924. The official languages were Italian, German & Hungarian - but conspicuously not Croatian (the language spoken by 30% of the territory’s inhabitants, mostly in the countryside).
The main language spoken at home in the city was Venetian
US President Woodrow Wilson was a firm supporter of keeping Fiume as an international city (one of several at the time such as Danzig) and suggested that the newly-invented League of Nations should be based there.
The free state was a hive of intellectual activity.
However this came to an end upon Mussolini’s seizure of power. The new fascist government in Italy forced Yugoslavia to accept the Treaty of Rome and forcibly annexed the Free State of Fiume in 1924.
Many of Fiume’s intellectuals, Communists and autonomists fled.
Fiume saw fierce fighting in WW2 & was taken by Yugoslav Communist partisans. Despite citizens’ desire to restore the free state, Fiume was forcibly annexed to Yugoslavia and renamed Rijeka.
The autonomist leaders were murdered. 2/3 of Fiume’s inhabitants were forced to emigrate
Fiume was a victim of many ideologies: Empire, Fascism, Communism and the nationalism of the nation-state.
It is interesting to think about the success a multiethnic free state could have enjoyed had Fiumians been allowed to choose their own destiny.
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In ten minutes Viktor Orban begins his debate with the 🇪🇺Parliament.
MEPS are expected to demand that he unequivocally states he will accept the result of the 🇺🇸election. Concerns have been raised after he reminded in a press conference yesterday that he's planning to use the Council presidency to host an informal meeting of EU prime ministers and presidents in Budapest 3 days after the 🇺🇸election - at a time when it is very likely Trump will be challenging the result if Harris wins.
"We will open several bottles of champagne if Trump is back," Orban told journalists.
In 2020, Orban and his ally Janez Jansa from Slovenia initially refused to recognise Biden's win.
Orban has entered the chamber.
Parliament speaker Roberta Metsola says introducing him: "The Hungarian presidency arrives at an important moment of institutional change [start of new term after 🇪🇺election] - a new mandate here brings new challenges and opportunities."
"Europe may not be perfect, and while we must be honest where we can do better, we must also not shy away from celebrating our successes," says 🇪🇺Parliament speaker Metsola.
"Prime minister, many of us recall the very lively debate [with you] 6 years ago here in the chamber. I expect no less today. Because in this house of democracy, as in Europe where the rule of law and freedom of expression are sacrosanct, we may not always agree but we will always give space for the respectful sharing of views."
Breaking: The European Commission is opening an 'excessive deficit procedure' against France for the first time.
This should have happened long ago, but France's power in Brussels for years made the Commission look away.
How will this impact the 🇫🇷legislative election?
Procedure also started for 🇮🇹🇵🇱🇧🇪🇭🇺🇲🇹🇸🇰
Romania currently the only country already under the excessive deficit procedure. Commission announces it will stay there.
The rules are meant to prevent a repeat of the 💶debt crisis, making countries tighten fiscal policy or face fines.
🇫🇷 had the 2nd-highest deficit (5.5%) in🇪🇺 in 2023, after 🇮🇹
For years EU officials openly acknowledged that France was getting special treatment, with 🇪🇺President Juncker famously explaining why France wasn't being put under the procedure by saying: "Parce que c'est la France"
The problem with the first option is you need to take the metro between train stations in Paris to switch, whereas in Lyon it's the same station
But...
🇪🇸Renfe & 🇫🇷SNCF don't have a ticketing agreement, so there's no way to get the preferred option as a combined ticket.
It doesn't show up on either website (Renfe won't even let you choose Brussels as a destination). Even 3rd party sites like SNCB Intl & Trainline can't show it
Tonight is the first semi-final for #Eurovision2023 in 🇬🇧Liverpool.
It's happening on the 25th anniversary of the 1998 contest hosted in 🇬🇧Birmingham, a transformative year that marks the boundary between the 'old' and 'new' Eurovision.
In 1998 Dana International became the first trans (and 1st openly LGBT) person to win the ESC.
Following the '98 contest it was decided to make two major rule changes: countries no longer had to sing in their national language and they weren't required to use an orchestra.
Those changes transformed what had become a stale archaic-looking contest in '90s into the explosion of spectacle in 2000s - helped also by the entry of enthusiastic Eastern European countries unable to participate during Communism.
The bookies have 🇸🇪Sweden as the favourite to win, followed by 🇫🇮Finland and 🇫🇷France.
But Sweden's odds have gotten worse since rehearsals started.
The singer, #Loreen, already won for 🇸🇪 in 2012 with Euphoria, a global hit hitting number one on the charts in 21 countries.
Among fans, I keep hearing "I predict Sweden will win but I don't want it to win". People like the song but think a 🇸🇪win is too predictable. 🇸🇪has dominated the contest for 2 decades.
If 🇸🇪win again they'll match Ireland's record for most wins - 7.