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Berlusconi wins parliamentary vote
Right-wing media mogul set to head new Italian government
By Ulrich Rippert
15 May 2001
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Tensely awaited parliamentary elections in Italy have ended
with a victory for media boss Silvio Berlusconi and his alliance
of right-wing parties assembled under the banner House of
Freedoms. Even as the initial, still indecisive results
were being reported Sunday evening, Berlusconi declared himself
the winner. His election manager warned, If they do not
declare us the winners, we will take to the streets in our millions.
Early press dispatches on Sunday reported a landslide victory
for the right-wing alliance, but as the night wore on Berlusconi's
lead shrank dramatically. For most of Monday the race between
the Berlusconi-led alliance and the ruling centre-left alliance
headed by Francesco Rutelliknown as the Olive-Treeremained
close. Only on Monday evening was it clear that Berlusconi had
the necessary majorities in both chambers of the Italian parliamentthe
House of Deputies and the Senateto form a government.
With nearly all the votes counted, Berlusconi had amassed almost
45 percent of votes cast for the House of Deputies and more than
42 percent for the Senate. Due to the complicated Italian election
system, the exact division of seats in the two chambers was still
not clear Monday evening. According to some press reports, which
remain to be confirmed, Berlusconi's Forza Italia party
had won more than 250 direct mandates in the House of Deputies
against 160 seats for the Olive-Tree alliance.
Compared with the results in the last national election, held
in 1996, Forza Italia increased its vote by 9 percent nationally
(from 20.6 percent to over 29 percent). In a press statement Forza
Italia declared itself to be far and away the most powerful
party in Italy.
Berlusconi's largest ally, the neo-fascist National Alliance,
which has its origins in Italy's post-war fascist MSI, lost some
4 percent, sliding to 12 percent of the national vote. The main
loser in the Berlusconi-led alliance of parties was the separatist
Northern League, whose leader Umberto Bossi conducted an aggressively
xenophobic and racist campaignif anything, more extreme
in its anti-immigrant rhetoric than the demagogy of Austria's
far-right leader Jörg Haider.
The Northern League, according to some reports, failed to reach
the threshold of 4 percent of the vote necessary under Italian
electoral law for party representation in parliament. The organisation
was, however, able to win some direct mandates.
In the camp of the centre left, the Left Democrats, which emerged
in the 1990s as the new face of Italy's Communist Party, was the
biggest loser. The party captured less than 17 percent of the
vote, compared with 21.2 percent in 1996.
The election victory of Berlusconi's right-wing alliance represents
a renewed shift to the right in Italian politics and has major
consequences for coming developments in Europe. Berlusconi, who
names Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher as his political idols,
combines pro-business, free market policies with vague
rhetoric about reform of the Italian economy and state. He advocates
a substantial cut in taxes combined with privatisation of state-run
enterprises and private inroads into state-run social welfare
programs. Throughout the campaign Berlusconi sought to deflect
criticisms of his vast wealth and shady business practices by
declaring all such accusations to be communist propaganda.
Berlusconi, who owns three of Italy's most influential television
channels as well as the country's biggest construction and property
concerns, is the wealthiest man in Italy, with a fortune of $13
billion. He is also widely considered to be one of the most corrupt
politicians in all of Europe. He first won power in 1994 but was
forced to resign as prime minister after only seven months when
it became clear that he was using his governmental power to further
his own entrepreneurial aims.
Since the beginning of the 1990s, over a dozen separate investigations
and criminal proceedings have been undertaken against Berlusconi.
The spectrum of claims and accusations against him extends from
perjury, falsifying financial records, tax offences and bribery
to collaboration with the Mafia. To date he has been found guilty
on no less than four occasions and sentenced to a total of six
years and three months in prison. Following a succession of appeals,
however, the sentences were lifted.
In the Sicilian capital of Palermo, Berlusconi's right-hand
man, the former head of his Fininvest-concern Pubitalia,
is presently in court facing charges of Mafia connections.
Prior to the election, the conservative British magazine Economist
proclaimed on its front cover that Berlusconi was unfit to
rule. It declared, In any self-respecting democracy it would
be unthinkable that the man assumed to be on the verge of being
elected prime minister would recently have come under investigation
for, among other things, money-laundering, complicity in murder,
connections with the Mafia, tax evasion and the bribing of politicians,
judges and the tax police. But the country is Italy and the man
is Silvio Berlusconi, almost certainly its richest citizen. As
our own investigations make plain, Mr. Berlusconi is not fit to
lead the government of any country, least of all one of the world's
richest democracies.
The article concluded, the election of Mr. Berlusconi
as prime minister would mark a dark day for Italian democracy
and the rule of law.
That a man who, according to the Italian weekly Léspresso,
deserves to spend more than 10 years in jail has been able to
gain power a second time testifies above all to the political
bankruptcy of the centre-left government that took power five
years ago. From the very start, this government regarded as its
main task the imposition of the economic measures demanded by
the international banks as the precondition for the integration
of the Italian lira into the European Union's euro currency.
Major cuts were made in social welfare programs under the Left
Democrat-led government, and the interests of the broad masses
of the population were treated with contempt. Unemployment remained
at chronically high levels. After the government abolished Italy's
long-standing policy of adjusting wages to compensate for rising
prices, the gulf between the industrial north and the impoverished
south deepened as never before.
On a number of occasions the centre-left government was in
a position to go on an offensive against Berlusconi and his Forza
Italia. But, fearing a movement of the broad masses, the Olive-Tree
alliance always sought to keep open the option of collaboration
with Berlusconi in the form of a government of national unity.
Several days before the election, the well-known Italian dramatist,
director and Nobel Prize winner Dario Fo drew attention to this
aspect of the role of the Olive-Tree government. Under the title
Is the Left Also Guilty? he said of an election victory
for Berlusconi:
What strikes me as foul in the whole story is the responsibility
of the centre-left government. In a thoroughly slavish manner,
the left kept Berlusconi in the game, because they believed this
was the best way to improve their prospects with undecided centre
parties. This is the only reason that things have advanced as
far as they have.
The choice of Francesco Rutelli, the former major of Rome,
to lead the Olive-Tree alliance was tantamount to a capitulation
before Berlusconi. Rutelli, who had transferred from the Greens
to the Democratic Party in order to forward his political career,
made a point of avoiding any serious confrontation with the media
mogul.
Only on the eve of the vote did the two alliances produce programmatic
documents, which underscored the lack of sharp differences between
the two on basic economic and social questions. The centre-left
adapted itself to Berlusconi's right-wing program, echoing his
call for cuts in the highest tax rates and the privatisation of
state-owned enterprises.
The campaign was dominated by mudslinging between the two camps,
arousing disgust within large sections of the electorate. As a
result, electoral research institutes predicted a low voter turnout.
The demoralisation of the centre-left government and its fear
of any independent movement of the population was expressed in
the decision of the Interior Ministry, supposedly on economic
grounds, to close a third of the polling stations.
To the surprise of both politicians and pollsters, nearly 81.5
percent of those entitled to votefar more than anticipatedwent
to the polls on Sunday. The larger than expected turnout, combined
with the closure of polling places, resulted in huge lines, long
waits and outright chaos in many parts of the country.
After standing in line for hours, many frustrated voters ripped
up their voting cards in disgust. In numerous locations it proved
impossible to close the polling stations at the designated time
of 10 p.m. In Rome, the final votes were cast at 2:15 a.m. In
Calabria people were voting until 4 a.m.
In Naples, where unemployment levels are among the highest
in Italy, hundreds of angry voters, frustrated by hours of waiting,
stormed a polling station and destroyed the ballots.
Amongst the first to congratulate Berlusconi was the right-wing
government in Austria. Sending greetings, Vienna called upon the
European Union (EU) to accept the result and refrain from imposing
sanctions, as it did against Austria following the election victory
of the alliance of the Austrian Liberal Party and Haider's Freedom
Party.
Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Pique said he hoped the result
would lead to the creation of a stable government. The Bavarian-based
Christian Social Union (CSU) declared: Socialist dominance
in Europe is crumbling. The chairman of the CSU in the German
parliament, Michael Glos, commented: Following the victory
of Bush in the US, this is a further encouraging signal for the
conservative camp in the EU.
The German government refused to make an initial comment, saying
the final result was still not clear. French Foreign Minister
Hubert Vedrine said that European governments would be keeping
a close eye on the new Italian government.
See Also:
Italy's Berlusconi and his House
of Freedoms
a new dimension in the development of the right wing in Europe
[7 May 2001]
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