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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Italy
A portrait of Italys Berlusconi government: "All
for One, and One for Himself"
Berlusconis Forza Italia: Part 2
By Peter Schwarz
16 April 2002
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In June 2001, for the second time since 1994, a right-wing
government led by the media mogul Silvio Berlusconi came to power
in Rome. Berlusconis Forza Italia, the neo-fascist Alleanza
Nazionale and the separatist Lega Nord formed a coalition that
violates the political norms of what was considered normal and
acceptable in post-war Europe. Below is the first part of a two-part
article analyzing the ideological and political roots of Forza
Italia. Further articles, dealing with the other parties in the
coalition and the reasons for its accession to power, will follow
later. The first part of this article was posted on Monday, April
15.
Forza Italia
The collapse of the old party system threatened the survival
of Berlusconis media empire. By the end of 1992, it had
accumulated debts of 4.500 billion lira (ca. 2,3 billion Euro),
while its legal foundations were shaky. It increasingly drew the
attention of the mani pulite (clean hands)
investigators and without political protection, it threatened
to collapse like a house of cards. Against this backdrop, Berlusconi
decided to launch an offensive by going into politics himself.
Forza Italia was foundedjust like the housing estate
Milano 2 and Berlusconis TV networkas a subsidiary
of Fininvest. In autumn 1993, long before the party made its first
public appearance, a group of leading company managers set out
its election campaign and strategy. Its leading political personnel
were provided by the in-house advertising company Publitalia.
Publitalia also elaborated the party program which was then tested
by Fininvests own opinion research institute Diakron and
modified in accordance with opinion polls.
The election candidates were selected in the same manner as
a resources department chooses the company employees. Specialised
head hunters were hired to check all applicants according to criteria
of productivity. They concentrated on the candidates sales
abilities while political experience was not required. Those who
passed this initial selection procedure were then tested by the
party leadership for their political suitability, their physical
appearance being decisive. Those with a beard or who wore glasses
had little chance. Eventually the marketing strategists of the
party headquarters provided the chosen few with catchy campaign
slogans and the proper image. The top campaigners were offered
special incentivestrips abroad, free tickets for soccer
matches and, the highest prize of all, a weekend in Berlusconis
private mansion.
Italian soccer fan clubsnotorious for their racism and
anti-Semitismserved as models for the artificial creation
of a popular base for the party. This was effected by the formation
of Forza Italia clubs, which distributed flags, pins, ties and
pictures of their guru in the colours of the Italian tricolour,
and had nothing to say in terms of politics. Even the name Forza
Italia (Italy First!)the battle cry of the fans
of the Italian national soccer teamoriginates from the world
of soccer. It goes almost without saying that Berlusconis
TV channel was also placed at the total service of Forza Italia
and its election campaign.
To this very day, Berlusconi himself maintains complete control
over Forza Italia and is the object of a veritable personality
cult. The first party congress was only convened in 1998, four
years after the founding of the party. Berlusconi bases himself
on a few confidants who have accompanied his rise since his early
youth. In both his first and second governments they were awarded
major ministerial posts.
A typical example is Cesare Previti, a close confidant and
lawyer of Berlusconi, who had been a sympathiser of the fascist
MSI before Forza Italia was founded. Cesares father, the tax consultant
Umberto Previti, had played an important role as CEO and partner
in Berlusconis building companies. Previti junior served
as in-house lawyer of Fininvest. In 1994, he was appointed minister
of defence. Originally, Berlusconi had intended to give him the
ministry of justice, but this was eventually prevented by a public
outcry. Previti, however, freely made use of his post as minister
of defence in order to launch media attacks on the public prosecutors
of Mani pulite and to inundate them with legal charges.
In 2001 he did not qualify for a post as minister, however, because
he was charged with bribery of a judge.
From a strictly economic viewpoint, Forza Italia turned out
to be a profitable investment for Fininvest. With 21 percent of
the vote, it won the elections and Berlusconi became head of government.
When the ruling coalition broke up and Berlusconi resigned seven
months later, Fininvest had truly put itself on an even keel.
Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti had pushed through new tax rules
which had credited savings in the double-digit millions to Berlusonis
company empire, thus saving it from bankruptcy. Tremonti, incidentally,
has meanwhile rejoined the cabinet. As head of the economic ministry,
which has been considerably enlarged, he takes responsibility
for the realisation of the market-liberal reforms and massive
tax cuts which have been announced by Berlusconi.
The program of Forza Italia
It would be a gross exaggeration to ascribe to Forza Italia
a party program in the traditional sense of the term. The political
statements and appeals of the party consist of sophisticated tidbits
for advertising spots exclusively designed for maximum public
effect and continuously reworked according to the latest polls.
Berlusconis message, reproduced a thousand times over by
his aides and TV channels, is crafted to appeal to the emotions,
not to the reason of his audience. Packaging takes precedence
over the content and nothing is left to chance. Every public appearance,
every statement of a candidate is planned to the last detail and
must be given the advance blessing of the marketing specialists
in the party headquarters.
Nevertheless, Forza Italia does have very definite aims.
First, there is the hysterical anticommunism which characterises
all of Berlusonis public appearances and grows into a veritable
persecution mania. Continuous attacks are levelled against the
public TV channel RAI; judges and public prosecutors are denounced
as red robes. Given the dissolution of the Soviet
Union and the Communist Party of Italy, this kind of anticommunism
appears somewhat strange, like a relic from the Cold War. However,
it has a rational kernel. It is directed against everything with
even remote connections to state intervention into the blind workings
of the market. Above all, Berlusconis anticommunism is directed
against any attempt on the part of the state to bring about greater
social equality.
In one his speeches, Berlusconi described his enemies as follows:
They dont believe in the market, they dont believe
in profit, they dont believe in the individual. They dont
believe that the world can be made a better place by the voluntary
contributions of many people who are very different from each
other. This is why we are compelled to oppose them. Because we
believe in the individual, the family, in entrepreneurship, in
competition, in progress, in efficiency, in the free market and
in solidarity, the daughter of justice and freedom.
The right-wing alliance which stood in the elections was called
pole of liberty. But Forza Italia knows only one liberty,
the liberty of using ones elbows, the liberation of the
individualor, rather, of Silvio Berlusconifrom all
considerations for the needs of society as a whole. The motto
of Berlusconis party was once described as all for
one, and one for himself.
This takes us to the second element of Forza Italias
program. With a delay of 20 years, Berlusconi has brought Thatcherism
to Italy. The infamous remark of the Iron Lady, There is
no such thing as society, there are only individuals, could
just as well have been uttered by Berlusconi. His closest aides
include extreme representatives of the monetarist school which
provided the economic cues for Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.
First among them is Antonio Martino, who contributed decisively
to the formulation of Forza Italias election platform. In
the first Berlusconi government, he headed the foreign ministry,
meanwhile he serves as minister of defence. Martino studied economics
in Chicago, collaborating closely with Milton Friedman, the leading
exponent of monetarism. The jurist and tax expert Giulio Tremonti,
finance minister in Berlusconis first government, who now
heads the combined ministry of economics and finances, is of the
same making. He gained prominence as one of the first to propose
the lowering of taxes on property, profits and exceptionally high
incomes.
The mantras of the monetarists figure prominently in the programmatic
statements of Forza Italia. Downsizing of state authorities, limits
on state expenditures, tax cuts, withdrawal of the state from
the economy, deregulation of the labour market, strengthening
of small and medium enterprises, restructuring of the social security
system and of family support programs occupy a central place in
the 45 points of the party program which was later expanded to
100 points. As in all right-wing programs, the withdrawal of the
state from the economy goes hand in hand with a strengthening
of its role in domestic policy: more law and order and a presidential
system which gives additional weight to the executive at the expense
of the legislative branch of government.
During his election campaign, Berlusconi spiced his watery
soup from the kitchen of monetarism with populist promises which
have proved both exaggerated and groundless. For example, he boastfully
announced the creation of one million new jobs, without explaining
in the least how or from where these were to come.
While Forza Italia is being steered from a single centre, in
its outward form it strives to give the impression of a citizens
movement. One of its first appeals, which was published by independent
professors even before its founding, was entitled: Counterattack
by Citizens. It put forward the demand that ordinary citizens
re-conquer politics and denounced parties and intellectuals for
having usurped all political rights. The party structureinnumerable
clubs (2,500 by February 1994) instead of local or regional unitsserved
to create the fake impression of citizen-friendliness and served
to veil the authoritarian character of the party. The members
of the clubs have nothing to say, they have no influence whatsoever,
either on the program of the party or the selection of its candidates.
Not even political discussion is envisaged.
The citizens targeted by Forza Italia in its program
clearly belong to the upper middle class. This relatively small
but influential social layer is the real audience and social base
of Berlusconis party. Most of its functionaries come from
these circlesentrepreneurs, self-employed people, freelancers
and well-situated employees.
The traditional employers association Confindustria originally
sneered at Berlusconi as a parvenu and for a long time continued
to support the middle-left-coalition, in which confidants of big
businesssuch as the former boss of the huge state holding
IRI, Romano Prodi, or the central bank leader Azeglio Ciampiplayed
a prominent role. However, in spring 2001 Confindustria changed
sides. When Berlusconi addressed their conference during his election
campaign, he was celebrated frenetically. In turn, he posed as
a 100 percent representative of big business (I will be
your first Italian entrepreneur) and stressed his complete
agreement (One might wonder whether I copied your program
or you copied mine.)
This turn of events had been preceded by a change in the course
and leadership of Confindustria. For the first time ever, the
association was now led not by a representative of large-scale
industry in the North, but by a small businessman from the South.
Behind this was a change in the structure of the Italian economy.
Intensified global competition and the outsourcing of ever larger
portions of major companies had greatly increased the weight of
small businesses. Only 15 percent of the Italian workforce are
today employed by companies with more than 500 workers, whereas
20 years ago it was 30 percent. (In France today it is still 43
percent, and in Germany as much as 56 percent.) Roughly three-quarters
of the Italian workforce are employed by small businesses with
less than 100 workers. The owners of these small companies, some
of which have prospered during the stock market and economic boom
during the past years while suffering from heavy competitive pressures,
are furiously hostile to taxes and compulsory contributions to
the social security system. They form the social basis that Berlusconi
seeks to mobilise in order to bring about a radical turn in economic
and social policies.
Power and the media
No description of Forza Italia would be complete without mentioning
the intimate links between political power and the power of the
media personified most clearly by Berlusconi himself. Since the
days of Joseph Goebbelswho as propaganda minister of the
Third Reich brought radio, press, film and culture into line and
subordinated them to Nazi powergovernment-controlled media
are generally interpreted as a sure sign of totalitarian dictatorship.
While Berlusconi is not Goebbels and Forza Italia is not the NSDAP,
neither of them have the slightest respect for the freedom of
the media.
Berlusconi as the head of government (and, by now, foreign
minister) owns and controls the countrys three largest private
TV channels. But that is not all. As leader of the opposition
and even more so as head of government Berlusconi has led a constant
vendetta against left journalists and representatives of cultural
lifethe term left applying to all those who
have reservations about his policies. Above all, the public TV
channel RAI is a thorn in his side. His campaign against RAI has
taken on a hysterical note. During his first and second periods
in office he replaced the RAI leadership, and he recently threatened
to sack the entire leading personnel for its unwelcome political
orientation. He accused the channel of scandalous behaviour
during the recent election campaign and brazenly claimed
that RAI had led a campaign against democracy. He
declared himself the victim of a political murder campaignKilleraggio,
as he called it. The leadership positions of the most important
cultural institutionsthe museums and even the Venice film
festivalhave also been staffed with Berlusconis supporters,
who know little about culture.
The three channels of Berlusconis TV network MediasetItalia
1, Retequattro and Canale 5have a combined market share
of 45 percent, which is about as much as the three public channels
of RAI. The remaining 10 percent belong to smaller, mostly regional
networks. Without this TV power, Berlusconis rapid political
rise would hardly have been possible. His company empire was turned
into an integral part of his campaign apparatus. Forza Italia
spent billions of liras on TV election ads, which promptly flowed
into the coffers of Berlusconis marketing companies and
TV channels. In addition, he had free propaganda incessantly showered
upon the Italian television audience by his news programs, talk
shows and entertainment programs. Thus the news editor of Retequattro,
Emilio Fede, indulged in gushing praise for his boss and broadcast
the entire first party conference of Forza Italiaan American
style convention.
Prior to the elections, Berlusconi had promised to resolve
the conflict of interests between his position as TV magnate and
head of government within his first 100 days in office. In the
event, he did nothing of the sort. Instead, the governments
majority in parliament passed a law which explicitly allowed Berlusconi
to keep his company empire. He is only barred from leading it
personally, e.g., he has to employ managers who are again recruited
from his closest friends and family.
Berlusonis monopoly on the media served him not only
as an effective political instrument during the election campaign,
it also contributed considerably to creating a social climate
favourable to his political accession. In this respect, there
are strong parallels to other media moguls like Rupert Murdoch
in Britain and the US or Leo Kirch in Germany.
The conception that television and other media could play a
role in raising the general cultural level of society is completely
alien to all three of them. Around the clock they broadcast programs
that foster the most backward and primitive conceptions. Berlusconi
gets his ratings above all through scantily-clad girls, cheap
entertainment shows and soap operas (which does not prevent the
otherwise quite prudish Catholic Church from closing ranks with
him). In the case of Murdoch, the same effect is created by shows
featuring excessive violence, and Kirch uses a combination of
all these elements. Even harmless sport programs are turned into
advertisement shows with unabashed chauvinism.
This is not simply a by-product of commercialisation. In other
words, Berlusconi is not simply producing a product in response
to some already existing demand. It is rather another aspect of
the anticommunism, the rejection of any social responsibility
in the name of social Darwinist individualism, which is so central
to Forza Italias ideology.
The socialist, above all the Marxist socialist movement, had
once set itself the task of raising the cultural level of the
working population. This is an integral part of the perspective
to overcome class antagonisms and enable the working class to
master society. German Social Democracy under August Bebel undertook
exemplary work in this respect. In innumerable educational clubs
and publications the SPD not only instructed their members in
the works of Marx and Engels as well as the basic concepts of
politics and class struggle, but also introduced them to Goethe,
Schiller, Heine, Balzac, Tolstoy, Beethoven and Schubert, to name
but a few.
These efforts were opposed not only by the ruling circles,
who fought them by mobilising the means of state power and all
available ideological weapons such as superstition, religion and
nationalism. They were also rejected by the bureaucratic apparatuses
which took over first the social democratic and later, under Stalin,
the communist parties. Against this backdrop, it is no accident
that Berlusconi rose to prominence under Bettino Craxi, the leader
of the Italian social democrats, or that British Labour leader
Tony Blair is bound by close ties to Rupert Murdoch.
The cultural mission of Berlusonis media empire can be
summed up in one phrase: the stupefaction of the people. Just
as in the field of economy and society, Berlusconi and Forza Italia
stand for unbridled backwardness and reaction in cultural life.
Concluded
References:
Besides personal observations based on years of study, the
author has used the following sources:
Paul Ginsborg, A History of Contemporary
Italy. Society and Politics 1943-1998, Penguin 1990
Mario G. Losano, Sonne in der Tasche. Italienische
Politik seit 1992 (Sun in the Pocket: Italian Politics Since
1992), Munich 1995
Friederike Hausmann, Kleine Geschichte Italiens
von 1943 bis heute (Brief History of Italy from 1943 to Today),
Berlin 1997
Christian Christen , Italiens Modernisierung
von Rechts. Berlusconi, Bossi, Fini oder die Zerschlagung des
Wohlfahrtsstaates (Italys Modernisation from the Right.
Berlusconi, Bossi, Fini or the Smashing of the Welfare State),
Berlin 2001
See Also:
A portrait of Italys Berlusconi
government: All for One, and One for Himself
Berlusconis Forza Italia: Part 1
[15 April 2002]
Millions demonstrate in Rome
against Berlusconi
[26 March 2002]
Hundreds of thousands demonstrate
in Rome against Berlusconi government
[7 March 2002]
Muslims, anti-globalization
movements labeled enemies of the West
Racist vomit from Italys PM Berlusconi
[29 September 2001]
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