Historical Left
The Historical Left, known in Italian as the Sinistra storica, was a loose parliamentary grouping of liberal politicians who came to dominate the politics of the Kingdom of Italy following the defeat of the more conservative Historical Right in 1876.[1] Emerging from the unification process as advocates for broader electoral participation and administrative reforms, its members, often called Democrats or Ministerials, prioritized economic liberalization, fiscal prudence inherited from their predecessors, and gradual democratization over radical upheaval.[2] Opposed to the centralizing tendencies of the Historical Right, the Left championed policies such as the extension of suffrage from a narrow property-based franchise to include literate males paying a modest tax, thereby tripling the electorate to over two million in 1882, though this still excluded most of the rural poor and illiterate masses.[3] Under leaders like Agostino Depretis, the group practiced trasformismo, a pragmatic strategy of co-opting opposition figures into governing coalitions to maintain power without fixed ideological lines, which enabled legislative stability but drew criticism for fostering opportunism and corruption.[4] Francesco Crispi's tenure advanced colonial ambitions and administrative centralization, yet ended in scandal over military defeats in Africa, while Giovanni Giolitti later oversaw industrial expansion and partial social reforms, including negotiations with emerging labor movements, before the group's dissolution amid pre-World War I fragmentation.[4][5] Despite achievements in modernizing Italy's state apparatus and integrating southern regions through infrastructure investments, the Historical Left's elite-driven approach failed to build broad popular legitimacy, contributing to social tensions and the eventual rise of mass parties that challenged liberal hegemony by 1913.[6] Its reliance on trasformismo isolated socialists and Catholics, exacerbating political instability as economic disparities persisted and universal male suffrage arrived only in the group's twilight years.[3]Origins and Early Development
Pre-Unification Roots and Formation
The roots of the Historical Left trace to the parliamentary dynamics of the Kingdom of Sardinia following the granting of the Albertine Statute on March 4, 1848, which established a constitutional monarchy and bicameral legislature. In the inaugural Subalpine Parliament, deputies divided into a conservative right, favoring limited reforms and alliance with traditional elites, and a more progressive left, advocating expanded civil liberties, administrative decentralization, and assertive action toward Italian unification. This left-wing grouping, often termed the Sinistra Costituzionale, emerged from liberal professionals, lawyers, and intellectuals who opposed the cautious approach of the Moderate party led by Massimo d'Azeglio.[7] Urbano Rattazzi, a lawyer from Alessandria elected to the Chamber of Deputies in the 1848 elections, quickly rose as the leader of this left faction, emphasizing secular governance, public education, and electoral reforms to broaden participation beyond the narrow censitary suffrage restricting voting to about 2.5% of the population. The Left criticized the government's hesitancy after the 1849 defeat at Novara, pushing for renewed military efforts against Austrian dominance in Lombardy-Venetia and integration of revolutionary elements from other Italian states. By 1852, Rattazzi's election as Chamber president on May 11 reflected the faction's growing influence, secured through 74 votes against 52 for the government candidate.[8] A pivotal development occurred in late January 1852 with the Connubio, a tactical alliance between Rattazzi's center-left and Camillo Benso di Cavour's center-right Moderates, aimed at isolating clerical and reactionary conservatives to enact liberal measures such as expanded press freedom and fiscal reforms. This coalition enabled Cavour's appointment as prime minister on November 3, 1852, marking the Left's integration into the governing process while maintaining distinct positions on accelerating unification and reducing clerical influence, evidenced by laws suppressing certain monastic orders and promoting civil marriage projects. The alliance underscored the Left's pragmatic constitutionalism, prioritizing national goals over ideological purity, though tensions persisted over the pace of democratization.[9][10] Throughout the 1850s, the Left supported Cavour's diplomatic maneuvers, including the 1855 Crimean War alliance, but advocated more radical steps like incorporating Mazzinian and Garibaldian republicans into the unification fold. Rattazzi served as Minister of the Interior in Cavour's cabinets, facilitating administrative preparations for expansion, yet the faction remained in opposition during key debates, critiquing insufficient suffrage extension—elections still yielded only around 400,000 voters by 1857. This pre-unification phase solidified the Historical Left's identity as reformist liberals committed to monarchy, free trade, and anti-Austrian irredentism, distinguishing them from both conservative elites and radical democrats.[11]Transition to Power in 1876
The transition of the Historical Left to power in 1876 followed a parliamentary crisis that undermined the preceding Historical Right government led by Marco Minghetti. On March 18, 1876, the Right lost a key vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies, rendering it unable to maintain governance amid disputes over fiscal policy and infrastructure contracts, particularly railways. King Victor Emmanuel II, recognizing the impossibility of the Right regaining parliamentary support, turned to Agostino Depretis, the nominal leader of the Left since Urbano Rattazzi's death in 1873, to form a new cabinet.[12] Depretis was appointed Prime Minister on March 25, 1876, establishing the first government composed exclusively of Historical Left members, including figures like Benedetto Cairoli and Francesco Crispi in key roles.[13] This marked a significant shift after over a decade of Right dominance since Italian unification in 1861, with the Left promising reforms such as expanded suffrage, administrative decentralization, and economic liberalization to address regional disparities and stimulate growth. However, the initial cabinet emphasized stability over radical change, setting the stage for Depretis's later policy of trasformismo, which involved pragmatic alliances across factions.[12] General elections held on November 5 and 12, 1876, under the restricted suffrage of the Statuto Albertino (limited to about 2% of the population, primarily literate males paying a certain tax), confirmed the Left's ascendancy. The Historical Left secured a clear parliamentary majority, while the Right was reduced to minimal representation, with only a handful of seats retained, reflecting voter shifts in northern and central Italy toward the Left's platform of modernization.[14] This electoral outcome solidified the power transition, enabling Depretis to govern until scandals forced a brief resignation in 1878, after which he swiftly returned.[12]Ideology and Principles
Core Tenets Compared to Historical Right
The Historical Left espoused tenets centered on expanding political participation and leveraging state intervention for socioeconomic modernization, distinguishing it from the Historical Right's emphasis on elite governance and fiscal restraint. While both factions adhered to liberal constitutionalism, monarchy, and anticlericalism as foundational to post-unification Italy, the Left prioritized democratization through suffrage reform, contrasting the Right's preference for a restricted electorate to maintain stability under propertied classes. The 1861 electoral law under Right dominance confined voting rights to approximately 2% of adult males based on wealth and literacy thresholds, reflecting a belief in governance by an informed minority to prevent populist excesses.[15] In opposition, Left leaders like Agostino Depretis advocated extending the franchise to all literate males over 21, a policy realized in the 1882 reform that tripled voter numbers to about 7% of the population, aiming to broaden representation and legitimize the new state among the masses.[15] Economically, the Left's platform rejected the Right's austere orthodoxy—characterized by balanced budgets, low direct taxation on land, and reliance on regressive indirect levies—in favor of redistributive and expansionary measures. The Right, under figures like Marco Minghetti, enforced fiscal conservatism to consolidate national finances post-1861, prioritizing debt reduction and administrative centralization over expansive spending.[16] The Left countered with promises of tax restructuring, including higher levies on agrarian wealth to fund infrastructure, alongside slashing import duties on grains to ease burdens on southern peasants, reflecting a populist orientation toward rural and lower-class interests.[15] This shift enabled deficit-financed initiatives, such as accelerated railway construction—over 6,000 kilometers built by 1890—intended to integrate peripheral regions and spur growth, though often at the expense of long-term solvency.[16] Ideologically, these divergences stemmed from differing visions of state-society relations: the Right viewed centralized authority and gradualism as safeguards for order amid Italy's regional fractures, while the Left promoted a more activist government to engineer progress and mitigate inequalities, albeit within capitalist bounds. Both rejected socialism, but the Left's rhetoric of reform appealed to emerging middle strata and southern clienteles, fostering transformism—pragmatic alliances transcending strict partisanship—over rigid doctrine.[15] Such tenets, however, masked limited substantive radicalism; the Left's democratic aspirations frequently yielded to parliamentary expediency, underscoring that differences with the Right were more tactical than foundational chasms in pursuing national consolidation.[16]Evolution and Pragmatic Shifts
The Historical Left, upon assuming power following the 1876 general election, initially advocated for expansive reforms including universal male suffrage, free trade, administrative decentralization, and anticlerical measures to secularize education and civil marriage.[17] However, governing a fragmented nation with deep regional divides and limited parliamentary majorities compelled leaders like Agostino Depretis to prioritize stability over ideological rigidity, marking an early pragmatic pivot. By 1879, Depretis formalized trasformismo, a strategy of selectively co-opting individual deputies from the Historical Right and moderate centrists into the government's coalition, thereby isolating extremists and securing fluid majorities without fixed party alliances.[18] This approach, while enabling legislative continuity, eroded the Left's distinct democratic tenets by incorporating conservative elements, fostering clientelism and electoral manipulation to "make" majorities.[19] Under Francesco Crispi's premierships (1887–1891 and 1893–1896), the Left further deviated from its republican origins toward authoritarian nationalism, exemplified by repressive laws against anarchists and socialists in 1894 and aggressive colonial pursuits in Eritrea and Ethiopia, culminating in the disastrous Battle of Adwa in 1896.[18] Crispi abandoned free-trade orthodoxy for protectionist tariffs in 1887 to shield nascent industries, reflecting a causal recognition that ideological purity hindered economic consolidation in an agrarian economy vulnerable to foreign competition.[17] Foreign policy shifted decisively in 1882 with Italy's entry into the Triple Alliance alongside Germany and Austria-Hungary, forsaking prior Francophile leanings for geopolitical realism amid tensions over Tunisia and the Balkans.[19] These adaptations, driven by the imperatives of state-building in a polycentric society, transformed the Left from a vehicle of radical change into a centrist bulwark, though at the cost of internal dissent from purists like the pentarchs (Zanardelli, Nicotera, and others) who decried the dilution of reformist zeal. Giovanni Giolitti's ascendancy from 1901 onward accelerated this evolution into overt trasformismo on a mass scale, incorporating emerging socialist elements through pacts like the 1901 Gentile Reform while suppressing strikes via military intervention, as in the 1898 Milan unrest precursors.[18] Giolitti's tenure emphasized infrastructural public works and electoral law expansions (from 3 million to 8 million voters by 1913), but these were pragmatic concessions to mitigate class tensions rather than principled egalitarianism, sustaining power through regional patronage networks amid southern clientelism.[17] By the early 1910s, such shifts had fragmented the Left into liberal, democratic, and radical factions, rendering it ideologically amorphous and vulnerable to dissolution as World War I exposed the limits of non-doctrinaire governance in addressing industrialization's social upheavals.[18] This trajectory underscores how empirical necessities—parliamentary fragility, economic underdevelopment, and external pressures—overrode abstract commitments, yielding a resilient but compromised political formation.Key Leadership and Internal Dynamics
Dominant Figures: Depretis, Cairoli, and Crispi
Agostino Depretis (1813–1887) assumed leadership of the Historical Left after Urbano Rattazzi's death in 1873 and orchestrated its ascent to power following the 1876 general election, forming Italy's first Left-led government on 25 March 1876.[20] As prime minister in multiple terms—November 1876 to March 1878, December 1878 to July 1879, and continuously from May 1881 until his death—Depretis implemented trasformismo, a strategy of assimilating individual deputies from the Historical Right into Left coalitions to secure parliamentary majorities without adhering to rigid party lines, thereby prioritizing governmental stability over ideological consistency.[21] This approach, formalized around 1882, enabled Depretis to marginalize extremists on both left and right while enacting reforms such as tax adjustments favoring lower incomes and public works expansion, though it drew accusations of opportunism for diluting the Left's original republican and decentralist principles.[22] Benedetto Cairoli (1825–1889), a Risorgimento veteran wounded in Garibaldi's campaigns, served as prime minister in three brief stints—March to December 1878, March to June 1879, and July 1879 to November 1881—amid persistent factional strife within the Left that undermined policy coherence.[23] Cairoli's governments pursued liberal measures, including commitments to civil liberties and opposition to clerical influence, but faltered on foreign affairs, notably during the 1875–1878 Near Eastern Crisis where irredentist pressures tested his cautious stance without committing to expansionist adventures.[24] His leadership emphasized parliamentary debate over executive dominance, yet internal dissensions—often pitting radicals against moderates—led to frequent cabinet collapses, highlighting the Historical Left's challenges in translating electoral gains into sustained governance.[25] Francesco Crispi (1818–1901), a former Mazzinian revolutionary from Sicily, aligned with the Historical Left post-unification and succeeded Depretis as prime minister in July 1887, holding office until February 1891 and again from March 1893 to March 1896.[4] Crispi advocated aggressive foreign policies to bolster national prestige, forging the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary in 1882 and pursuing colonial ventures in Eritrea and Somalia, though his ambitions culminated in the humiliating defeat at the Battle of Adwa on 1 March 1896 against Ethiopia, exposing Italy's military and fiscal limitations.[26] Domestically, he centralized administration and suppressed socialist unrest, reflecting a shift toward authoritarian tendencies that strained relations with Left purists, yet his tenure reinforced the party's commitment to monarchical loyalty and anti-republican moderation.[27] Together, Depretis, Cairoli, and Crispi embodied the Historical Left's transition from opposition radicalism to ruling pragmatism, dominating Italian politics from 1876 to the 1890s through a blend of reformist domestic agendas and realist power consolidation, often at the expense of the party's founding ideological fervor.[24] Their eras marked a causal pivot wherein parliamentary necessities compelled ideological compromises, enabling longevity in office but sowing seeds of internal factionalism that persisted into the Giolittian period.Giolitti Era and Factionalism
Giovanni Giolitti emerged as the dominant figure within the Historical Left following the political instability of the late 1890s, assuming leadership after Francesco Crispi's isolation and serving as Prime Minister for the first time from May 1892 to November 1893.[28] His subsequent terms in 1903–1905, 1906–1909, 1911–1914, and 1920–1921 solidified the "Giolittian Era," particularly from 1901 to 1914, during which he shaped Italian politics through pragmatic governance aimed at integrating emerging social forces.[29] Giolitti's approach, known as Giolittismo, relied heavily on trasformismo, a strategy of forming flexible centrist coalitions by co-opting moderate elements from various groups, including reformist socialists, while isolating political extremes on both left and right.[28] This method prevented the Historical Left from developing a structured party organization, fostering instead informal personal loyalties and groupings that exacerbated internal factionalism.[28] By incorporating moderate socialists into parliamentary support—such as through tacit alliances that enabled labor organization and social reforms like old-age pensions in 1919—Giolitti sought to defuse class tensions, but this alienated more radical factions within the left who viewed collaboration with the liberal state as a betrayal of revolutionary principles.[29] Factionalism within the Historical Left intensified under Giolitti due to divisions between his pragmatic, non-interventionist centrists and more ideological radicals, particularly evident in debates over foreign policy and suffrage expansion. In 1912, Giolitti enacted universal male suffrage, enfranchising over 8 million new voters and shifting power dynamics, which reformist socialists welcomed but maximalists in the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) rejected as insufficient for systemic change.[29] The 1911 Italo-Turkish War over Libya, initially opposed by Giolitti's neutralist stance but pursued under pressure from nationalist factions, highlighted rifts, as left-wing socialists criticized the colonial venture while Giolitti balanced it with domestic concessions to maintain coalition stability.[29] By 1914, as World War I loomed, Giolitti's advocacy for neutrality deepened internal schisms, pitting his faction against interventionist radicals and nationalists who accused him of weakness, labeling him "the quisling."[29] These divisions reflected broader tensions between Giolitti's vision of moderated modernization—evident in infrastructure investments and worker rights—and the intransigence of both conservative elites fearing economic shifts and leftist purists opposing incrementalism, ultimately weakening the Historical Left's cohesion amid rising socialist maximalism and Catholic political mobilization.[30] Giolitti's dominance, while achieving short-term stability, relied on patronage networks that critics argued perpetuated corruption and hindered the left's ideological unity.Policies and Governance
Domestic Reforms and Transformism
Upon taking power in 1876, the Historical Left government under Prime Minister Agostino Depretis initiated domestic reforms to expand political participation and address social needs, departing from the fiscal conservatism of the preceding Historical Right. A cornerstone measure was the Coppino Law of July 15, 1877, which mandated free and compulsory elementary education for children aged six to nine, aiming to reduce illiteracy rates that exceeded 70% in southern Italy at the time.[31] This reform marked an early step toward modernizing the education system, though implementation faced challenges due to inadequate infrastructure and regional disparities.[14] Further broadening access to governance, Depretis's administration extended suffrage in 1882 from males paying at least 40 lire in direct taxes—encompassing roughly 2% of the population—to those paying 20 lire, increasing eligible voters from approximately 600,000 to over 3 million, or about 7% of the populace.[12] [32] Complementary changes included abolishing imprisonment for debt and pursuing tax reforms to lighten burdens on lower classes, though these efforts often prioritized political consolidation over deep structural change.[14] To sustain these initiatives amid a fragmented parliament lacking strict party discipline, Depretis developed trasformismo, a pragmatic strategy of co-opting opposition deputies—particularly from the right and center—into government coalitions through patronage, favors, and ministerial posts, effectively neutralizing dissent without ideological confrontation.[12] [33] First articulated in an 1882 speech, this approach allowed Depretis to form fluid majorities, as seen in his multiple ministries from 1876 to 1887, but it blurred the Left's original progressive tenets, fostering accusations of opportunism and corruption by integrating notables who traded independence for local benefits.[34] [14] While trasformismo ensured short-term stability, enabling reforms like suffrage expansion, it contributed to immobilism on broader issues such as land reform and southern development, as governments avoided alienating absorbed factions.[35] Successors like Benedetto Cairoli and Francesco Crispi adapted the practice, but Depretis's version set a precedent for governance prioritizing elite accommodation over programmatic coherence, influencing Italian politics into the early 20th century.[12][36]Economic Policies and Fiscal Realities
The Historical Left, upon assuming power in 1876, prioritized tax relief measures to fulfill electoral promises, notably the gradual reduction and eventual abolition of the unpopular tassa sul macinato—an indirect levy on grain milling introduced in 1868 that had generated approximately 80 million lire annually in revenue.[37] This reform, initiated in 1879 under Prime Minister Agostino Depretis and completed by 1884, alleviated burdens on agricultural producers but created a significant shortfall in state finances, as the tax had contributed substantially to the budget balanced just prior under the Historical Right in 1875.[19] Concurrently, the government expanded public expenditure on infrastructure, including railway extensions and irrigation projects, alongside increased military outlays, which exacerbated fiscal imbalances and led to recurring deficits by the mid-1880s.[19] Under Finance Minister Agostino Magliani, fiscal management adopted a permissive approach, relying on short-term expedients such as advancing treasury funds and issuing low-interest bonds to cover gaps, which masked underlying structural weaknesses but sowed seeds for later instability. This policy contrasted with the Right's austere orthodoxy, prioritizing political consensus through spending over rigid balancing, though it drew criticism for fostering dependency on irregular financing mechanisms. By 1884–1885, the deficit reemerged prominently, with public debt rising amid these expansions.[19] A pivotal shift occurred in 1887 during Francesco Crispi's first ministry, when Parliament enacted protectionist tariffs on industrial imports and sharply raised duties on wheat, marking a departure from prior free-trade leanings toward shielding nascent northern steel, textile, and agricultural sectors from foreign competition.[38] These measures, effective from January 1888, aimed to bolster domestic industry but contributed to higher consumer costs and strained trade relations, particularly with France, while providing modest revenue boosts insufficient to offset broader spending pressures.[38] In the Giolitti era commencing around 1900, fiscal policy emphasized stabilization, with efforts to rationalize expenditures, reform taxation, and achieve budgetary equilibrium through measures like enhanced revenue collection and restrained military commitments.[39] Giolitti's administrations interacted positively between monetary and fiscal levers, supporting economic expansion while curtailing deficits, though persistent factional demands for regional subsidies—especially in the South—continued to challenge long-term sustainability.[39] Overall, the Left's approach yielded modernization gains in infrastructure and industry but at the cost of elevated debt levels, averaging annual deficits that undermined fiscal credibility by the 1890s banking crisis.[30]Foreign Policy and Colonial Ambitions
The Historical Left's foreign policy, initially characterized by caution following the Right's focus on consolidation, shifted toward alignment with European powers for security. In 1882, under Prime Minister Agostino Depretis, Italy entered the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary, primarily to safeguard against French revanchism after the loss of Savoy and Nice, while compensating for Italy's strained relations with Austria over irredentist claims in Trentino and Trieste.[4] This pact, renewed periodically, positioned Italy within the Central Powers' orbit but highlighted internal tensions due to anti-Austrian sentiments among left-wing nationalists.[40] Colonial ambitions emerged as a means to bolster national prestige and economic outlets, diverging from the Left's earlier republican internationalism. Depretis supported the acquisition of Assab in 1882 by a Genoese shipping company, marking Italy's initial foothold in the Red Sea, followed by the occupation of Massawa in 1885 amid rivalry with Britain over Egyptian influence.[4] These moves reflected pragmatic expansionism to emulate France and Britain during the Scramble for Africa, though constrained by limited resources and domestic opposition to overseas ventures.[41] Under Francesco Crispi, who served as prime minister from 1887 to 1891 and 1893 to 1896, foreign policy adopted an aggressive imperialist stance, emphasizing military buildup and African conquest to unify the nation around expansionist goals. Crispi formalized Eritrea as Italy's first colony in 1890, consolidating Red Sea holdings, and pursued hegemony in Ethiopia via the Treaty of Wuchale in 1889, which Italy interpreted as granting a protectorate but Ethiopia viewed as mere alliance terms, sowing seeds for conflict.[42] This policy, coupled with tariff wars against France from 1888 to 1898, strained finances and isolated Italy diplomatically, as Crispi's irredentist rhetoric alienated Austria despite the Triple Alliance.[4] The pinnacle of these ambitions was the First Italo-Ethiopian War (1895–1896), where Italian forces under General Oreste Baratieri invaded Tigray, aiming to subjugate Emperor Menelik II's empire. Initial successes gave way to catastrophic defeat at the Battle of Adwa on March 1, 1896, with over 6,000 Italian casualties against Ethiopian forces numbering around 100,000, exposing logistical failures and underestimation of local resistance. The rout compelled Crispi's resignation, curtailed colonial pursuits temporarily, and inflicted a severe blow to Italy's prestige, underscoring the mismatch between rhetorical imperialism and military capacity.[42] Despite these setbacks, the era entrenched colonialism as a bipartisan fixture in Italian politics, influencing subsequent governments.[41]Electoral and Parliamentary Record
Election Results and Representation
The electoral system in the Kingdom of Italy during the Historical Left's era featured restricted suffrage limited to literate males aged 25 and older who paid at least 40 lire in direct taxes annually, encompassing roughly 2-3% of the population, primarily property owners and the middle class. Elections for the Chamber of Deputies employed a two-round majoritarian system in single-member constituencies, with low turnout—often below 60%—exacerbated by administrative barriers, clientelism, and government influence over local officials, which favored incumbents. The Senate, appointed by the king, provided a counterbalance but generally aligned with the Chamber's majority. Political groupings like the Historical Left and Right lacked formal party structures, relying on parliamentary factions and personal networks rather than national vote shares.[43] In initial post-unification elections, the Historical Right secured dominance, reflecting its control over northern and central elites. The 1861 election yielded 349 seats for the Right and 94 for the Left out of 443 total seats in the Chamber. By 1865, the Right maintained 330 seats against the Left's 163, amid 39 annulled elections due to irregularities. The 1870 snap election, following Rome's annexation, saw the Right at 270 seats and Left at 238 out of 443, with turnout at 48% in the final ballot. The Right's final hold came in 1874, with 276 seats to the Left's 232 out of 508, bolstered by stronger northern support despite Left gains in the South (70% of southern seats).[43] The pivotal 1876 election marked the Left's ascent, following the Right's parliamentary defeat in March, when Agostino Depretis formed a minority government before calling polls. The Left, as ministerialists, captured 414 seats against 94 for the opposition (primarily Right), out of 508 total, with 209,872 votes to the opposition's 42,057 and 56% turnout.[43] This "parliamentary revolution" entrenched Left representation, which expanded in 1880 to 337 seats (218 ministerial, 119 dissident) against the Right's 171, amid suffrage debates leading to the 1882 reform doubling eligible voters to about 2 million.[43]| Election Year | Total Seats | Historical Right Seats | Historical Left Seats | Turnout (Final Ballot) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1861 | 443 | 349 | 94 | ~57% |
| 1865 | 443 | 330 | 163 | 55% |
| 1870 | 443 | 270 | 238 | 48% |
| 1874 | 508 | 276 | 232 | 52% |
| 1876 | 508 | 94 (opposition) | 414 (ministerial) | 56% |
| 1880 | 508 | 171 | 337 (total) | 61% |