The early positions reflected in the manifesto would later be characterized by Mussolini in 1932 "
The Doctrine of Fascism" as "a series of pointers, forecasts, hints which, when freed from the inevitable matrix of contingencies, were to develop in a few years time into a series of doctrinal positions entitling Fascism to rank as a political doctrine differing from all others, past or present." Of the manifesto's proposals, the commitment to corporative organisation of economic interests was to be the longest lasting. While proportional representation in parliamentary elections — a demand of the original Fascist manifesto — was introduced by the government of
Francesco Saverio Nitti already in 1919, Mussolini replaced it with a system which gave two-thirds of parliamentary seats to the first-placed party through the
Acerbo law. Far from becoming a medium of extended democracy,
parliament became by law an exclusively Fascist-picked body in 1929; being replaced by the "chamber of corporations" a decade later. The demand for universal suffrage would only be satisfied by the
Italian Republic after the fall of fascism: voting rights for women were introduced for the
1946 constituent assembly election and
institutional referendum, and the
Constitution of the Italian Republic produced by this assembly lowered the eligibility age to 25 two years later, but it was only in 1975 that the voting age was lowered to 18. The
senate was never abolished by Mussolini; it was only transformed from a royally-appointed body to an elective one by the republican constitution after his regime's demise. An eight-hour workday was introduced in 1925. Fascism's pacifist foreign policy ceased during its first year of Italian government. In September 1923, the
Corfu crisis demonstrated the regime's willingness to use force internationally. Perhaps the greatest success of Fascist diplomacy was the
Lateran Treaty of February 1929, which accepted the principle of non-interference in the affairs of the Church. This ended the 59-year-old dispute between Italy and the
Papacy. == See also ==