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Italian foreign minister resigns
By Patrick Richter
19 January 2002
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On New Years Eve, while other European capitals were
celebrating the introduction of the new single currency, the euro,
in Italy there was only an accentuated silence. No ceremonies
were held in Rome, and in contrast to his European Union (EU)
colleagues, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi did not consider
it necessary to do anything at all to honour the new currency.
All the more louder and vulgar, then, were the public proclamations
of opposition to the euro emanating from his rightwing government
colleagues, such as Defence Secretary Antonio Martino, Finance
Minister Giulio Tremonti or Reform Minister and leader of the
Northern League Umberto Bossi. Martino said that the value of
the euro had gone down not only against the dollar, but also against
the potato of Macau. Tremonti scoffed, saying he would
rather leave the praise about the advantages of the euro to flag-waving
apes, faith-healers, medicine men, and bankers, and Bossi
said the euro made absolutely no difference to him.
The queues in front of every ATM machine were, in his opinion,
just an invention of the media.
These utterances led to an open crisis within the government.
On January 5 Foreign Minister Renato Ruggiero resigned, after
sharply criticising the anti-euro stance of his fellow cabinet
ministers, saying he had nothing in common with this tragedy.
Instead of supporting him, Berlusconi claimed Ruggiero was only
a technical functionary, since it was the prime minister
who determined foreign policy. The non-party 71-year-old Ruggiero
was considered to be a convinced European who served to advertise
Italys international bona fides and provided a counterweight
to the nationalist cacophony emanating from Berlusconi and his
other ministers. Ruggiero had led the World Trade Organisation
for many years, and was brought into the government with the support
of President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, as well as Fiat boss Giovanni
Agnelli.
In the other EU governments, Ruggieros resignationand
the anti-euro language of Berlusconis ministersunleashed
fears that Italy was seriously drifting away from the European
consensus. Since Berlusconi entered office last spring the EU
has repeatedly conflicted with Rome. Italy refused to participate
in the EU project of building the Airbus 400M military transporter,
or to agree to a uniform European arrest warrant.
In the case of the transporter, Italy favoured a cheaper variant
from US manufacturer Lockheed and thus sought to prove its independence
from Europe. Above all, the dominance of France and Germany within
the EU is a thorn in Romes side, which repeatedly causes
differences and diplomatic irritations. It is clear that Berlusconis
private interests play a major role regarding the European arrest
warrant. Legal proceedings are pending against him both at home
and abroad, which mainly concern accusations of corruption and
falsifying finance records in connection with his media company
Fininvest.
Following Ruggieros resignation, the European government
heads and foreign ministers immediately demanded Berlusconi give
a clear acknowledgement of support for the European
project. This he did, boasting there was no other country,
which was more for Europe. In an interview with the French
newspaper Le Monde, Berlusconi said he wanted the EU to
be a community of values, a union, which does not have anything
to do with nationalism, but which provides an alternative solution
to the vision of centralism that is supported by the socialist
parties of Europe.
Berlusconi has prevented deputy Prime Minister Gianfranco Finias
the natural candidatefrom taking over the foreign
ministers post, and for at least the next six months Berlusconi
himself will take charge of foreign affairs. Fini, chairman of
the rightwing Alleanza Nazionale (AN, National Alliance), is regarded
in European political circles as too disreputable, because the
ANs roots are in the neo-fascist Movimento Sociale Italiano
(MSI). In 1999, Fini had praised Mussolini as the greatest
statesman of the 20th century.
Berlusconis legal scandals
Berlusconi also faces pressure from other quarters. On January
7 there was a one-day country-wide strike by all bank employees
because of euro stress, since the punctual distribution
and extensive supply requirements of the euro had not been assured
by the government, thus creating additional work for bank staff.
Moreover, legal proceedings against Berlusconi threaten to
result in a guilty verdict with a possible custodial sentence,
causing an even greater scandal.
In the present corruption trial being held in Milan, Berlusconi
stands accused of having bribed a judge at the end of the 1980s
who had to decide on the privatisation of a state-owned food retail
concern. Berlusconis company was finally granted preferential
terms. The co-accused is Cesare Previti, a trusted friend of Berlusconis
for many years and a parliamentary deputy of his party Forza Italia,
who was also Defense Secretary in 1994 in the first Berlusconi
government.
Berlusconi is utilising the weight of the government machinery
to do everything in order to halt the legal proceedings. Amongst
other things, he is accused, together with the help of his Justice
Minister Roberto Castelli of the Northern League, of intervening
directly in the proceedings. Castelli wanted to issue a decree
recalling one of the investigating judges, Guido Brambilla, from
the Milan court. This would have ended the proceedings, because
under Italian law, judges may not be replaced during a trial.
By the time new proceedings could be started, the case would have
fallen under the statute of limitations, saving Berlusconi. However,
the Milan court of appeal has declared Castellis decision
null and void.
In 1994, during his first term in office, corruption proceedings
became a stumbling block for Berlusconi, for which he is now seeking
revenge through introducing judicial reforms. Milan State Attorney
Francesco Saverio Borelli has accused the government of wanting
to hobble the independence of the judiciary, rejecting claims
that it is pure coincidence that the bodyguards afforded
to the state attorneys in the Berlusconi case have been withdrawn.
Borrelli was Chief State Attorney in 1992, when corruption proceedings
against various politicians and business figures were launched.
The work of the pool of judges involved in the mani pulite
affair (clean hands) led to the fall of the government at that
time.
In a newspaper interview, Milan State Attorney Ilda Boccassini
confirmed she had not had any armed escort since last September;
instead only one police officer was assigned to her protection.
She feels her life is in danger, as a result of her continuing
investigations against the Mafia.
Consequently, at the beginning of the week, there were protest
demonstrations by judicial employees, who Berlusconi derided in
his characteristic manner as communists or red robed
judges.
Berlusconi, whose extensive business interests give him almost
monopoly control over the countrys press and broadcast media
and make him Italys richest man, is systematically trying
to eliminate any democratic control of his mafia-like scheming.
Meanwhile, the leading politicians in Europes capitals close
their eyes, or like German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer during
his recent trip to Rome, let Berlusconi publicly fuss over him
in paternalistic style. Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder says there
is no Berlusconi case.
Berlusconis programme
Much more is still expected of Berlusconi. Every European politician
knows that he has still not implemented the social attacks, which
he loudly announced. As head of government, he has primarily dedicated
himself to his private interests, while up to now, almost nothing
can be seen of his contract with the Italians or his
100-day-programme.
This programme consists of continuing the policies of his predecessors
in order to meet the agreed Maastricht criteria for European Monetary
Union. Crucially, this includes tax and pensions reforms, as well
as making the job market more flexible. According
to Treasury plans, taxes are to be levied at only two rates22
and 33 percentproviding some 23 billion euros relief, above
all for the better off. How the loss of government income is to
be financed and/or where savings are made remains unclear.
Drastic changes in Italys pensions system and job market
have previously always resulted in massive working class protests,
leading to government resignations or the government being voted
out. Berlusconi experienced this himself in 1994, when his pension
plans resulted in an 18-day general strike, leading to his fall
as prime minister after only seven months. So far, he has not
submitted any plans for pensions or job market reforms.
This is the dilemma his government faces. He has only clung
to power through a bizarre mixture of empty promises, nationalist
rhetoric and media slapstickover the past year he spent
nearly 20 hours in television appearances.
It has only been possible for him to do this, due to the enormous
discrediting of the centre-left opposition. Since 1994, the Olive
tree (Ulivio) alliancefirst under Romano Prodi,
then under the chairman of the post-Stalinist Party of the Democratic
Left and finally under Giulio Amatohad been preparing Italy
for the euro with a programme of drastic cuts. These austerity
measures meant Ulivio lost any credibility in the population and
thus opened the way for Berlusconi and his rightwing, or rather
fascist, allies.
Of course, his European colleagues know all this, but do not
see any other political force at present in Italy capable of implementing
these policies and so support him despite all the problems. Germanys
Die Zeit newsweekly recently expressed these considerations:
Berlusconi represents the parvenus of Italian society, who
want to enrich themselves by any means; Bossi represents the angry
petty bourgeois of the wealthy North; Fini stands in the fascist
tradition and its attempt to modernise itself in the third millennium.
For the working class, this means creating an independent political
agency to defend its own interests on a socialist basis along
with those of workers throughout the other European countries.
The role of the left
Nothing can be expected from the lefts who are represented
in the Olive Tree alliance. The left-liberal Ulivio leader Francesco
Rutelli has said that the lefts task is not to give
the impression that we would not permit him [Berlusconi] to govern.
Rather, the left needs to revive itself from the ground up, in
order to guarantee that if he fails, we are ready
to continue the previous policy: The coalition governments
I led made a crucial contribution to reorganising state finances...
Rutelli has said.
So far, the Olive Tree has only organised a few protest demonstrations
against Ruggieros resignation.
The 1997 Nobel Prize Winner Dario Fo has said he cannot understand
the lefts opportunism. In light of the seriousness of the
situation, the opposition in Italy is behaving as if nothing has
happened, he has said. Not even the usual spectacular, but fruitless
protest actions have taken place so far. According to Fo, the
Greens and the leftwing parties are still on their holidays, and
the only fighting measures they are prepared to undertake
is an appearance on the Maurizio Costanzo talkshow on Berlusconis
Canale 5, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary. And
everyone was smiling and well-behaved, in order to honour Silvio
Berlusconi there. It simply tears ones heart.
Darkest pessimism and great lethargy have overcome the left-wing
intellectuals. The Sicilian writer Vincenzo Consolo, presently
living in Milan, says he is experiencing a sad and depressing
Italy. He attributes Berlusconis lack of scruples
and decadence to the entire population: In this country,
humane and civil values have been lost. The country is the victim
of what Carlo Levi called eternal Italian fascism.
Curzio Maltese, one the most important commentators writing
in the left-liberal newspaper La Repubblica, made a similar
prophecy: The day on which the people switch off the television
and fill the streets with protest, will be the beginning of the
end for the populist Berlusconi. But that day does not seem particularly
close.
The working class cannot expect any political clarity, let
alone determination, from these quarters, if Berlusconi keeps
applying the cuts screw and the Olive Tree keeps covering for
him.
See Also:
Italys right-wing
government unveils new attacks on workers
[22 September 2001]
Italys Berlusconi
and his House of Freedomsa new dimension in
the development of the right wing in Europe
[7 May 2001]
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