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Vito Marcantonio

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Vito Marcantonio
Marcantonio in the 1930s
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from New York
In office
January 3, 1939 – January 3, 1951
Preceded byJames J. Lanzetta
Succeeded byJames G. Donovan
Constituency20th district (1939–1945)
18th district (1945–1951)
In office
January 3, 1935 – January 3, 1937
Preceded byJames J. Lanzetta
Succeeded byJames J. Lanzetta
Constituency20th district
Personal details
Born
Vito Anthony Marcantonio

December 10, 1902
New York City, U.S.
DiedAugust 9, 1954(1954-08-09) (aged 51)
New York City, U.S.
Political partyAmerican Labor (1937–1954)
Republican (1935–1937)
Spouse
Miriam A. Sanders
(m. 1925)
Alma materNew York University School of Law

Vito Anthony Marcantonio (December 10, 1902 – August 9, 1954) was an American lawyer and politician who served East Harlem for seven terms in the United States House of Representatives.[1]

For most of his political career, he was a member of the American Labor Party, believing that neither major American political party supported the interests of the working class. For two years prior to his party switching to Labor, he was a New Deal coalition member of the progressive branch of the Republican Party as a supporter of Fiorello LaGuardia (the progressive, pro-New Deal Republican mayor of New York at the time). Marcantonio was a socialist and avid supporter of political causes and positions which he deemed in the interests of the working class, poor, immigrants, labor unions, and African-American civil rights.[2]

Marcantonio represented the neighborhood of East Harlem in New York City (containing the smaller neighborhoods of Italian Harlem and Spanish Harlem), which was home to many ethnic Italians, Jews, African-Americans, and Puerto Ricans. He spoke Spanish, Italian, and English. Marcantonio advocated fiercely for the rights of African-Americans, Italian-American immigrants, and Puerto Rican immigrants in Harlem, as well as for unions and workers in general.

Early life and education

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Marcantonio was the son of an American-born father and Italian-born mother, both with origins in Picerno, in the Basilicata region of Southern Italy.[3] He was born on December 10, 1902, in the impoverished Italian Harlem ghetto of East Harlem, New York City.[1] He attended New York City public schools, becoming the only member of his class from East Harlem to graduate from De Witt Clinton High School in Hell's Kitchen,[citation needed] and eventually received his LL.B. from the New York University School of Law in 1925.

Career

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In the 1920 United States presidential election, Marcantonio campaigned for Parley P. Christensen, the candidate of the Farmer-Labor Party.[1] In 1924, he became campaign manager for the congressional campaign of Fiorello La Guardia, then a Progressive–Socialist.[1] Together, LaGuardia and Marcantonio also campaigned for U.S. Senator Robert M. La Follette for President.[1][4] Marcantonio also became secretary of the Tenants League, which fought high rents and evictions.[1]

After passing the New York bar examination in 1925, Marcatonio began practicing law, first for Foster, La Guardia, and Cutler.[1] He clerked at the law firm of Swinburne Hale, Walter Nelles, and Isaac Shorr, known for its representation of politically radical individuals and organizations. There, he worked with labor lawyer Joseph R. Brodsky, who "significantly contributed to his left orientation" toward Marxism.[4]

From 1926 to 1932, Marcantonio ran La Guardia's campaigns every two years.[1] From 1930 to 1931, he worked as an assistant United States attorney.[1]

Political career

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U.S. Congress

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From 1949's Pictorial Directory of the 81st Congress

Marcantonio was first elected to the United States House of Representatives from New York in 1934 as a Republican.[1] He received a warm write-up in the New Masses in the November 1936 issue.[1] He served in the House from 1935 until 1937 but was defeated in 1936 for re-election. Marcantonio's district was centered in his native East Harlem, New York City, which had many residents and immigrants of Italian and Puerto Rican origin. Fluent in Spanish as well as Italian, he was considered an ally of the Puerto Rican and Italian-American communities, and an advocate for the rights of the workers, immigrants, and the poor.[5]

In 1939, Marcantonio criticized the 1936 prosecution and conviction of Puerto Rican Nationalist Party president Pedro Albizu Campos on charges of sedition and other crimes against the United States. In addition to defending the Puerto Rican and Italian communities and common workers, Marcantonio was a strong advocate of Harlem's African-American communities and fought vehemently for black civil rights decades before the civil rights movement of the 1950s–1960s. In either 1937 or 1938, Marcantonio became a member of the American Labor Party (ALP). He was elected to the House again from New York in 1938, and served this time for six terms, from 1939 to 1951, being reelected in the elections of 1940, 1942, 1944, 1946,[6] and 1948. He was so popular in that district that he cross-filed in the cross-filing primaries between Democratic and Republican primaries, and won the nominations of both parties. He also gained the endorsement of the ALP, in an example of electoral fusion.[7]

Aside from Marcantonio, the only other ALP congressman was Leo Isacson, who served in Congress from 1948 to 1949, after winning a special election; he was defeated in the next general election. On election day in 1946, a Republican election captain named Joseph Scottoriggio, who was supporting Marcantonio's opponent, was severely beaten and died days later.[8] New York City mobster Mike Coppola is believed to have been responsible.[9][10]

On November 25, 1947, the day after the House voted for indictment of the Hollywood Ten for contempt of Congress, Representative Walter Judd attacked Marcantonio by likening the ALP to the China Democratic League in China at that time. He said: "The history of the Democratic League is astonishingly like that of the American Labor Party to which the gentleman belongs. It was originally a coalition of labor groups, liberals and Communists. Then the genuine liberals discovered that it and they were being used as fronts or tools of the Communists, and, as the gentleman from New York is well aware, they broke off and established the Liberal Party."[11]

Henry Wallace and Paul Robeson flank Marcantonio just before an American Labor Party rally at Madison Square Garden, 1949

In 1948, Marcantonio was an avid supporter of former Vice President Henry A. Wallace, who ran for President on the Progressive Party ticket.[12] A campaign film by Carl Marzani shows Marcantonio's district and his efforts on its behalf.[13][14] Marcantonio was reelected. In 1949, Marcantonio ran for Mayor of New York City on the ALP ticket but was defeated.[7]

Marcantonio was able to win reelection in 1948 due to the Democrats and Republicans splitting the vote. Republican Thomas J. Curran and Democratic Ferdinand Pecora worked together to find a compromise candidate. Jonathan Brewster Bingham, John Ellis, James J. Lanzetta, Thomas Francis Murphy, and Wendell Willkie's wife Edith Willkie were considered. James G. Donovan was selected.[15]

Marcantonio attacked Donovan as a "Sutton Place Dixiecrat". He was defeated by Donovan in the 1950 election. The Liberals opposed Donovan in later elections.[16] The passage of the Wilson Pakula Act in 1947 also played some part in Marcantonio's defeat.[17] The law prevented candidates from running in the primaries of parties with which they were not affiliated. It was widely perceived as being directed against Marcantonio.[17] As the sole representative of his party for most of his years in Congress, Marcantonio never held a committee chairmanship. After his defeat in 1950 and the withdrawal of the Communist Party support for the ALP, the party soon fell apart.[18]

Political ideology

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Marcantonio was inspired politically by his Roman Catholic faith. He had always identified himself as a Catholic. In 1939, while speaking at the National Conference of the ILD, he described himself as "a Roman Catholic who has not deserted the faith of his fathers."[19]

Marcantonio, who was arguably one of the most left-wing members of Congress, said that party loyalty was less important than voting with his conscience. He was sympathetic to the Socialist and Communist parties, and to labor unions. He was investigated by the FBI in the 1940s and 1950s because of his extensive affiliation with members of the Communist Party and known Communist front groups.[20][21]

Civil rights

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In 2010, historian Thaddeus Russell described Marcantonio as "one of the greatest champions of black civil rights during the 1930s and 1940s."[22] He sponsored bills to prohibit the poll tax, used by the Southern United States to disenfranchise poor voters, and to make lynching a federal crime.[22]

Foreign policy

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In 1940, Marcantonio helped form the American Peace Mobilization (APM), a group whose aim was to keep the U.S. from participating in World War II. Before the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in Moscow August 23, 1939, the APM's precursor organization, the Comintern-directed American League for Peace and Democracy, had been anti-Nazi. Marcantonio served as the APM's vice-chair. He appeared in a newsreel in 1940 denouncing "the imperialist war", a line taken by Joseph Stalin and his supporters in the Soviet Union (USSR) until Operation Barbarossa. The Pact lasted until the Germans broke it by invading the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941. In 1942, Marcantonio worked to expand the U.S. military commitment to a second front in Europe against the Nazi German expansion, which became Operation Torch. The USSR ordered Communist parties throughout the world to promote the idea to help it defeat Nazism. Marcantonio was also a vice president of the International Workers Order, a fraternal benefit society unofficially affiliated with the Communist Party.[23]

In 1947, when the U.S. Congress passed legislation to provide financial aid to fight communism in Turkey and Greece, such as during the Greek Civil War, Marcantonio was the only congressman to not applaud the action, symbolizing his disagreement with the Truman Doctrine.[24] In 1950, Marcantonio opposed American involvement in the Korean War. He argued that North Korea had been the victim of an unprovoked attack by South Korea. He cited articles by I. F. Stone, a radical journalist.[citation needed]

Freedom of expression

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In 1941, Marcantonio represented Dale Zysman, a high school coach and board member of the New York City Teachers Union also known as Jack Hardy, a communist writer for International Publishers, in a New York Board of Education hearing. Marcantonio asked for a ten-day stay because the Board had failed to present "an itemized bill of particulars", which stay the Board denied. Zysman walked out.[25]

Spanish in Puerto Rico's schools

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In 1946, Marcantonio introduced legislation to restore Spanish as the language of instruction in Puerto Rico's schools asking President Harry S. Truman to sign the bill "in the name of the children of Puerto Rico who are being tortured by the prevailing system…to fight cultural chauvinism and to correct past errors." President Truman signed the bill.[5] In 1948, schools were able to return to teaching in the Spanish language, but English was required in schools as a second language.[citation needed]

Later life and death

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After his defeat in mayoral and congressional elections, Marcantonio continued to practice law. It was his law practice, maintained while in Congress, that had generated the money by which he substantially self-financed his political campaigns. [citation needed] At first, he practiced in Washington, D.C., but he soon returned to New York City. At the time of his death in 1954, Marcantonio was running for Congress as the candidate of a newly formed third party, the Good Neighbor Party.[18] He died on August 9, 1954, from a heart attack after coming up the subway stairs on Broadway by City Hall Park in Lower Manhattan. As a devout Catholic, he was given conditional absolution and extreme unction, the last sacrament of the Church.[26][27]

Legacy

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Marcantonio's collection of speeches, I Vote My Conscience (1956), edited by Annette Rubinstein, influenced the next generation of young radicals.[28] His defense of workers rights, his mastery of parliamentary procedure, his ability to relate to the workers in his district while also engaging in worldwide issues, made him a hero to a certain section of the left. Rubinstein's book was reprinted in a new edition in 2002.[28]

Tony Kushner's play The Intelligent Homosexual's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures has a main character who is a fictional "cousin" of Vito Marcantonio.

Works

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Pamphlets written by Marcantonio include:

  • Labor's Martyrs': Haymarket 1887, Sacco and Vanzetti 1927 (1941)[29]
  • Should America Go to War? (1941)[30]
  • Marcantonio Answers F.D.R.! (1941)[31]
  • Security with FDR (1944)[32]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Minton, Bruce (November 1936). "That Man Marcantonio" (PDF). New Masses: 3–5. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 17, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  2. ^ Serby, Benjamin (December 20, 2018). "New York's Last Socialist Congressperson". Jacobin. Archived from the original on July 6, 2022.
  3. ^ Meyer, Gerald (1989). Vito Marcantonio: Radical Politician, 1902–1954. Albany: SUNY Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0791400838.
  4. ^ a b Murtagh, Matthew (May 18, 2010). "Politician, Social Worker, and Lawyer. Vito Marcantonio and Constituent Legal Services". VitoMarcantonio.com. Archived from the original on February 26, 2018. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Simon, John J. (March 1, 2006). "Rebel in the House: The Life and Times of Vito Marcantonio". Monthly Review. Archived from the original on August 15, 2021. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  6. ^ "Representative Vito Marcantonio of New York". US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives. September 11, 2001. Archived from the original on December 6, 2020. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  7. ^ a b Sammin, Kyle (August 13, 2019). "A Socialist Predecessor of Ocasio-Cortez in Congress". National Review.
  8. ^ Pegler, Westbrook (November 21, 1946). "Fair Enough (column)". The Montana Standard. Butte, Montana. p. 4. Retrieved July 3, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Maeder, Jay (October 1, 2000). "The Witness: Doris Coppola, March 1948". Daily News. New York City. p. 27. Retrieved July 3, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Gage, Nicholas (November 18, 1971). "Mafia Is Male Chauvinist Stronghold". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. p. B-5. Retrieved July 3, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Congressional Record. US GPO. November 25, 1947. p. 11762. Archived from the original on September 12, 2021. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
  12. ^ "Marcantonio, Vito (Anthony)". Credo. The Columbia Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on December 14, 2014. Retrieved December 14, 2014.
  13. ^ People’s Congressman on Vimeo
  14. ^ Musser, Charles (2009). "Carl Marzani and Union Films: Making Left-Wing Documentaries during the Cold War, 1946–53" (PDF). The Moving Image. 9 (1): 135–143. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 26, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  15. ^ Soyer 2021, p. 120-121.
  16. ^ Soyer 2021, p. 121-122.
  17. ^ a b Nicolás Kanellos; Francisco A. Lomelí; Claudio Esteva Fabregat; Felix M. Padilla (1994). Handbook of Hispanic Cultures in the United States. Arte Publico Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-1558851016. Archived from the original on September 12, 2021. Retrieved April 23, 2009.
  18. ^ a b Vito Marcantonio, Radical Congressman from New York Archived August 17, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, PoliticalAffairs. Retrieved 8-11-09
  19. ^ "Vito Marcantonio Online". Vito Marcantonio Organization. August 14, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2022. he had always identified himself as a Catholic. For example, in 1939, while speaking before the National Conference of the ILD, ... with a description of himself 'As a Roman Catholic who has not deserted the faith of his fathers.'-->
  20. ^ "Vito Marcantonio, Ethnic Populist". State University of New York Press. Retrieved March 26, 2022. further to the left with a domestic political agenda roughly parallel to that the Communist Party (CP).
  21. ^ "Vito Marcantonio". Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on October 15, 2004. Retrieved March 8, 2022. Congressman Marcantonio was the subject of an FBI security matter investigation during the 1940s and 1950s in view of his extensive affiliation with members of the Communist Party and known communist front groups.-->{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  22. ^ a b Thaddeus Russell, A Renegade History of the United States, 2010, p. 188 (section – "Italian Americans: Out of Africa"
  23. ^ Sabin, Arthur J. (1993). Red Scare in Court: New York Versus The International Workers Order. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania. pp. 310–311.
  24. ^ Trussel, C.P. Congress is Soleman: Prepares to Consider Bills After Hearing the President Gravely Soviet Called Issue Some Hold Truman Plan Is Blow to U.N. – All but Marcantonio Applaud. New York Times (1923–Current file); New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y.] March 13, 1947: 1
  25. ^ "Zysman Identified as Red: Teachers Union Leader Tried in Absence After He Walks Out on Hearing" (PDF). New York Sun. September 17, 1941. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  26. ^ "Vito Marcantonio Online". Vito Marcantonio Organization. August 14, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2022. a priest who administered the last rites of the Catholic Church.-->
  27. ^ "Remembering Vito Marcantonio". Center For Puerto Rican Studies. August 14, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2022. Marcantonio had been a devout Catholic.-->
  28. ^ a b "I Vote My Conscience, 2002 edition, hosted at Vito Marcantonio official website". Archived from the original on December 7, 2013. Retrieved November 1, 2013.
  29. ^ Marcantonio, Vito (1937). "Labor's Martyrs': Haymarket 1887, Sacco and Vanzetti 1927". Prism: Political & Rights Issues & Social Movements. Introduction by William Z. Foster. Workers Library Publishers: 16. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  30. ^ Marcantonio, Vito (1941). Should America Go to War?. American People's Mobilization. p. 11. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  31. ^ Marcantonio, Vito (1941). Marcantonio Answers F.D.R.!: Congressman Vito Marcantonio's Complete Radio Address Exposing the President's Drive to War. American People's Mobilization. p. 8. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  32. ^ Marcantonio, Vito (1944). Security with FDR. National Fraternal Committee for the Re-election of President Roosevelt. p. 34. Archived from the original on June 14, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2021.

Works cited

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Further reading

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  • Luconi, Stefano, "When East Harlem's Politics Was an Italian-American Matter: The Lanzetta–Marcantonio Congressional Races, 1934–1940," in Italian Signs, American Politics: Current Affairs, Historical Perspectives, Empirical Analyses, ed. Ottorino Cappelli, 113–66. (New York: John D. Calandra Italian American Institute, 2012. 236 pp.)
  • Luthin, Reinhard H. (1954). "Vito Marcantonio: New York's Leftist Laborite". American Demagogues: Twentieth Century. Beacon Press. ASIN B0007DN37C. LCCN 54-8428. OCLC 1098334.
  • Meyer, Gerald J. Vito Marcantonio: Radical Politician, 1902–1954 (1989)
  • Simon, John J. "Rebel in the House," Monthly Review: An Independent Socialist Magazine (2006) 57#11 pp. 24–46.
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U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 20th congressional district

1935–1937
Succeeded by
James J. Lanzetta
Preceded by
James J. Lanzetta
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 20th congressional district

1939–1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 18th congressional district

1945–1951
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by
None
American Labor Nominee for Mayor of New York City
1949
Succeeded by