On April 4, 1920, Padovani enrolled in Benito Mussolini"s Fasci organization. In 1921, Padovani emerged as the Fascist chief for the city of Naples. A charismatic figure, signups increased under his administration, and candidates sponsored by the Fascists fared disproportionately well in Naples in the 1921 election.
He participated in Mussolini"s October 1922 March on Rome and quickly became a prominent figure in the South thereafter, exercising supreme authority as the Ras of the Campania region.
Just as quickly, however, internal rivalries and tensions increased. An avowed republican, he also disliked Mussolini"s overtures to the Italian monarchy.
On May 19, 1923, Padovani was compelled to resign so Greco could take his place. Padovani continued to protest his loyalty to the Fascist Party, and he was later reinstated, though he never returned to public office.
The dramatic and peculiar circumstances surrounding his death were reported in foreign media.
Stepping out onto the balcony of his home to greet a throng of admirers, the balcony inexplicably collapsed, killing Padovani and eight others Foul play has long been suspected, as Padovani"s lingering popularity and influence were a probable source of unease on Mussolini"s part. Thousands turned out for Padovani"s funeral.
In 1934, Piazza Santa Maria degli Angeli in Naples was renamed Aurelio Padovani Square and a huge monument was erected bearing his name.
After World World War II, the square"s name was reverted and the monument was dismantled, its fate forgotten until 2010 when its remains were found in the Bourbon Tunnel.
Padovani was an exponent of the left wing of fascism, and he criticized the party for becoming too bourgeois at the expense of workers" interests. Padovani opposed political compromises such as the merger with the Nationalists, seeing such moves as betrayals of fascism"s "revolutionary" origins.