Following the defeat of d'Annunzio's forces, there was an election of the Constituent Assembly, giving
autonomists and independentists an overwhelming victory with 65% of the vote. On 5 October 1921,
Riccardo Zanella became the first and only elected president of the short lived
Free State of Fiume, but that was unable to end disputes over the city. Seven months later in Rome, Mussolini became prime minister, and Italy started heading towards a fascist regime. As a result, Zanella was overthrown in a putsch by local fascists in March 1922, resulting in an Italian military occupation of the city. The period of diplomatic tension ended with the
Treaty of Rome on 27 January 1924, which assigned Fiume to Italy and
Sušak along with other villages, to Yugoslavia, with joint port administration. ==See also==