Philip Guarino


Philip A. Guarino was an American former Roman Catholic priest and restaurateur who was active in Republican Party politics for many years. A resident of Italy during the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, he was later a long-time associate of Italian neo-Fascist political activists.

Biography

Guarino was born in West Winfield, Pennsylvania and graduated from Boston College in 1931. Guarino later lived in Italy where he graduated from theology school and was ordained a Catholic priest. He moved to Washington, D.C. in 1945, and opened Phil's Italian Restaurant. He was a long time friend of Michele Sindona, Paul Peter Rao, Frank Stella and Licio Gelli. He later left the priesthood, and in 1973, married Sarah H. Guarino.
After moving to Washington, DC, Guarino became active in politics. In all he met or served four US Presidents on Italian-American or Republican committees: Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and George H. W. Bush. He was invited to various state dinners and served on Bush's campaign committee.
In 1973, with the permission of then-Grand Master, Antoine Zdrojewski, and Swiss Prior Alfred Zappelli, Guarino founded the "U.S. Priory" of the Ordre Souverain et Militaire du Temple de Jérusalem, which in English was called the "Supreme Military Order of the Jerusalem Temple."
Prior to Michele Sindona's arrest and conviction in 1980, Guarino is alleged to have "coordinated" efforts to save him. It has been claimed that Guarino was linked to the U.S. Secret Service and Cosa Nostra, and on behalf of those organizations, was trying to rehabilitate Sindona.
After his involvement in politics, he became an active member of various hospitality industry trade associations. He died on November 10, 1993 at the age of 86.

P2 controversy

During his career, Guarino was accused several times of having ties to various Italian fascist organisations and was accused of being a member of Licio Gelli's P2 Masonic Lodge. In 1988, the Washington Jewish Week published an article suggesting that several members of George H. W. Bush's "ethnic coalition", including Guarino, had ties to various anti-Semitic, neo-Nazi and fascist groups. Six members of the ethnic coalition resigned from the campaign, including Guarino. Bush defended Guarino and several others, insisting they were "honorable men". The Anti-Defamation League, though, suggested the Republican Party had not adequately investigated the allegations.
Though Guarino was open about knowing Gelli, he emphatically denied ever being part of the P2 Lodge - a denial repeated by Bush's campaign team. When the Italian police investigated P2, they found that Guarino was corresponding with Gelli. Guarino also hosted Gelli at Reagan’s 1981 Inauguration, introducing him to distinguished guests.

Appointments

Guarino’s appointments: