Home About Chat Users Issues Party Candidates Polling Firms Media News Polls Calendar Key Races United States President Senate House Governors International

New User Account
"A comprehensive, collaborative elections resource." 
Email: Password:

  Tito, Josip Broz
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationLeague of Communists of Yugoslavia  
 
NameJosip Broz Tito
Address
, , Yugoslavia
EmailNone
Website [Link]
Born May 07, 1892
DiedMay 04, 1980 (87 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedJuan Croniqueur
Jun 30, 2023 02:50am
Tags Army -
InfoTito was born Josip Broz in Kumrovec, Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Croatia), in an area called Zagorje. He was the seventh child in the family of Franjo and Marija Broz. His father Franjo Broz was a Croat, while his mother Marija (born Javeršek) was Slovenian. After spending part of his childhood years with his maternal grandfather in Podsreda, he entered the primary school in Kumrovec, and failed the first grade. He left school in 1905.

In 1907, moving out of the rural environment, Broz started working as a machinist's apprentice in Sisak. There he became aware of the labor movement and celebrated May 1 - Labor Day for the first time. In 1910 he joined the union of metallurgy workers and at the same time the Social-Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia. Between 1911 and 1913, Broz worked for shorter periods in Kamnik, Slovenia; Cenkovo, Bohemia; Munich and Mannheim, Germany, where he worked for Benz automobile factory; then went to Vienna, Austria, where he worked at Daimler as a test driver.

From autumn 1913, Broz was conscripted and served in the Austro-Hungarian Army; in May 1914 he won a silver medal at a fencing competition of the Austro-Hungarian Army in Budapest. At the outbreak of the First World War, he was sent to Ruma. He was arrested for anti-war propaganda and imprisoned in the Petrovaradin fortress. In 1915, he was sent to the Eastern Front in Galicia to fight against Russia. While in Bukovina he was seriously injured by a howitzer shell. By April, the whole battalion fell into Russian captivity.

After spending several months at the hospital, Broz was sent to a work camp in the Ural mountains in autumn of 1916. In April, 1917, he was arrested for organizing demonstrations of prisoners of war but later he escaped and joined the demonstrations in Saint Petersburg on July 16-17, 1917. He fled to Finland to avoid the police, but was arrested and locked in the Petropavlovsk fortress for three weeks. After being imprisoned in a camp in Kungur, he escaped from a train. In November, he enlisted in the Red Army in Omsk, Siberia. In the spring of 1918, he applied for membership in the Russian Communist Party.

In 1936 the Comintern sent comrade Walter (i.e. Tito) back to Yugoslavia from Moscow to purge the Communist Party there. In 1937 he became secretary general of the Yugoslav Communist Party. During this period he faithfully followed Comintern policy, criticizing Serbian domination of other Yugoslav nationalities and agitating for the breakup of the Yugoslav state.

In 1920, he became a member of the soon to be banned Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Their influence on the political life of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was minor at the time. In 1934, he became a member of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Party, then located in Vienna, Austria, and adopted the code name "Tito".

A popular explanation of the sobriquet claims that it is a conjunction of two Serbian and Croatian words, ti (meaning "you") and to (meaning "that"). As the story goes, during the frantic times of his command, he would issue commands with those two words, by pointing to the person, and then task. In reality, Tito is an old, though uncommon, Croatian name, corresponding to Titus. Tito's biographer, Vladimir Dedijer claimed that it came from the Croatian romantic writer, Tituš Brezovački.

On April 6, 1941, German, Italian, Hungarian, and Bulgarian forces attacked Yugoslavia. The Luftwaffe bombed Belgrade and other major Yugoslav cities. On April 17, representatives of Yugoslavia's various regions signed an armistice with Germany at Belgrade, ending eleven days of resistance against the invading German Wehrmacht.

The Independent State of Croatia was established as a Nazi puppet-state, ruled by the Ustaše, a militant wing of the Croatian Party of Rights which detached from it in 1929, went into exile into Italy, and were therefore limited in their activities until 1941. German troops occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as part of Serbia and Slovenia, while other parts of the country were occupied by Bulgaria, Hungary and Italy.

In April 1941, the Yugoslav Communists were among the first to organize a resistance movement. On April 10th, the Politburo of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia met in Zagreb and decided to start the resistance, naming Tito the chief of the military committee.

The first resistance action in occupied Yugoslavia occurred on April 29 in Maribor, where local communist youths set several German vehicles on fire. Several other actions followed, including that on June 22, when a group of 49 local men formed a military formation and attacked a German supply train near Sisak. On July 4, Tito issued a public call for armed resistance against the Nazi/Fascist occupation. Starting on July 7 in Bela Crkva, Yugoslav partisans staged a wide-spread guerrilla campaign and started liberating chunks of territory. The activities provoked Germans into "retaliation" against civilians that resulted in mass murders (for each killed German soldier 100 civilians were to be killed and for each wounded 50).

In the liberated territories, the Partisans organized people's committees to act as civilian government. Tito was the most prominent leader of the Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia - AVNOJ, which convened in Bihać on November 26, 1942 and in Jajce on November 29, 1943. On these two sessions, they established the basis for post-war organisation of the country, making it a federation, and naming Tito the Marshal of Yugoslavia. On December 4, 1943, while most of the country was still occupied by the Axis, Tito proclaimed a provisional democratic Yugoslav government.

As the leader of the communist resistance, Tito was a target for the Axis forces in occupied Yugoslavia. The Germans came close to capturing/killing Tito on at least three occasions: in the 1943 Fall Weiss offensive; in the subsequent Schwarz offensive, in which he was wounded on June 9, having his life saved only because his loyal dog sacrificed himself; and on May 25, 1944, when he barely managed to evade the Germans after their Operation Rösselsprung airdrop outside his Drvar headquarters.

During the early stages of the Second World War, the partisan activities were not directly supported by the western Allies, but after the Tehran and Yalta conferences in 1943, the partisans were supported directly by Allied airdrops to their headquarters, with Brigadier Fitzroy MacLean playing a significant role in the liaison missions. The Balkan Air Force was formed in June 1944 to control operations that were mainly aimed at helping his forces. Due to his close ties to Stalin, Tito often quarreled with the British and American staff officers attached to his headquarters.

On April 5, 1945 Tito signed an agreement with the USSR allowing "temporary entry of Soviet troops into Yugoslav territory". Aided by the Red Army, the partisans won the war for liberation in 1945.

All external forces were ordered off Yugoslav soil after the end of hostilities in Europe. The remaining fascist Ustaša and royalist Četnik troops and their supporters were subject to summary trials and execution en masse, particularly in the Bleiburg massacre and foibe massacres.

After the Tito-Šubašić Agreement in late 1944, the provisional government of Democratic Federal Yugoslavia was assembled on March 7, 1945 in Belgrade, headed by Tito. After the elections in November 1945, Tito became the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. It was at this time that Tito's forces, in loose conjunction with the Red Army, were involved in killings and deportations to Yugoslav and Soviet labor camps of many Donauschwaben (ethnic Germans from Yugoslavia), as well as those Yugoslavs who objected.

In 1948, Tito became the first Communist leader who defied Stalin's leadership over the Cominform, and the Yugoslav Communist Party was ejected from the association on June 28, 1948. This brought Tito much international recognition, but also caused a rift with the Soviet Union and triggered a period of instability often referred to as the Informbiro period. Tito's form of communism was labelled Titoism by Moscow which encouraged purges against suspected "Titoites'" throughout the Communist bloc.

On June 26, 1950, the National Assembly supported a crucial bill written by Milovan Đilas and Tito about "self-management" (samoupravljanje): a type of independent socialism that experimented with profit sharing with workers in state-run enterprises. On January 13, 1953, they established that the law on self-management was the basis of the entire social order in Yugoslavia. Tito also succeeded Ivan Ribar as the President of Yugoslavia on January 14, 1953. On April 7, 1963, the country changed its official name to Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Tito's rule had the character of a dictatorship. The Communist Party won the first post-war elections under unfair conditions and it conducted espionage and assassinations with the secret police UDBA and security agency OZNA as well as politically motivated trials and imprisonment. It did, however, consolidate the country that was gravely impacted by war and successfully suppressed the nationalist sentiments of the peoples of Yugoslavia in favor of the common Yugoslav goal.

Under Tito's rule or titoism, Yugoslavia also became a founding member of the Non-Aligned Movement. In 1961, Tito co-founded the movement with Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser and India's Jawaharlal Nehru, thus establishing strong ties with the third world countries.

For a period in the 1960s and '70s, some intellectuals in the west saw Tito's model of market socialism as representing a point to which the Soviet and western economic systems would over time converge. The Yugoslav standard of living was somewhat higher than Eastern Europe, particularly because Yugoslavs were permitted to travel easily to Western Europe or other countries, bringing in money to support the economy.

Tito's greatest strength in the eyes of the western communists had been in suppressing nationalist insurrections and maintaining unity throughout the country. It was Tito's call for unity, and related methods, that held together the people of Yugoslavia. This ability was put to a test several times during his reign, notably during the so-called Croatian Spring (also referred to as masovni pokret, maspok, meaning "mass movement") when the government had to suppress both public demonstrations and dissenting opinions within the Communist Party.

On May 16, 1974, a new Constitution was passed, and Josip Broz Tito was named President for life.

In January 1980 Tito was admitted to the clinical centre in Ljubljana, Slovenia with circulation problems in his legs, and his left leg was amputated soon afterwards. He died there on May 4, 1980, three days before his 88th birthday, and his funeral drew many world celebrities, mainly politicians. It was the second largest funeral by number of politicians and state delegations in history.

[Link]

JOB APPROVAL POLLS

BOOKS
Title Purchase Contributor

EVENTS
Start Date End Date Type Title Contributor

NEWS
Date Category Headline Article Contributor

DISCUSSION
Importance? 10.00000 Average

FAMILY

INFORMATION LINKS
Marxists Internet Archive  Discuss
RACES
  05/16/1974 Yugoslavia President for Life Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  07/29/1971 Yugoslavia President Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  05/17/1967 Yugoslavia President Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  10/04/1966 SKJ Chairman of the Presidium Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  04/07/1963 Yugoslavia President Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  09/01/1961 NAM Chairman Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  04/19/1958 Yugoslavia President Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  01/29/1954 Yugoslavia President Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  01/14/1953 Yugoslavia President of the Federal Executive Council Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  01/14/1953 Yugoslavia President Won 99.82% (+99.65%)
  11/07/1952 SKJ General Secretary Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  03/07/1945 Yugoslavia Prime Minister Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  08/01/1937 KPJ General Secretary Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
ENDORSEMENTS