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Italian President Ciampi blocks Berlusconis justice
reforms
By Marianne Arens
29 December 2004
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On December 16, Italian President Carlo Ciampi refused to sign
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconis justice reform bill, thereby
blocking its enactment. The reforms were passed by
the Italian parliament on December 1, on the basis of the votes
of the right-wing majority, consisting of Berlusconis Forza
Italia, the neo-fascist Alleanza Nazionale (National Alliance),
the Lega Nord (Northern League) and the UDC (Christian Democrats).
Ciampis action means the bill will have to be debated
once again in both houses of parliament.
Among the bills most significant proposals were restrictions
on the authority of the Supreme Judicial Council (Consiglio Superiore
della MagistraturaCSM), which is responsible for the selection,
promotion and assignment of judges. The Council is independent
of the government. Its members are elected by parliamentary deputies
and judges, and its work overseen by the president.
The bill also included measures to erode the independence of
the countrys public prosecutors, who, like Italian judges,
are independent of the executive. It proposed placing them under
the direct control of the justice minister. This would have enabled
the government to exert influence on the scheduling of criminal
proceedings.
The reforms would have prohibited public prosecutors
and judges from making political comments, actively engaging in
political or union activities, or participating in demonstrations.
Other provisions were designed to more rigidly separate prosecutors
and judges, and give the government more power over their selection.
For example, psychological performance tests were to be introduced
to determine their eligibility.
The judicial reform bill is a major attack on the constitutional
principle of the political independence of the judiciary and on
democratic rights in general. The veto by Ciampi does not mean
that its measures have been permanently defeated. If the bill
is passed once again by parliament, Ciampi cannot legally refuse
to sign it.
Precisely this scenario unfolded a year ago in relation to
Berlusconis media reforms. Vetoed initially by the president,
the bill was later enacted after it passed through parliament
a second time.
The dispute over Berlusconis justice reforms
dates back to the start of his second term in office in the summer
of 2001. Since then, the government has embarked on a systematic
campaign to weaken or abolish existing regulations and laws, such
as those dealing with accounting practices, money laundering and
the prohibition on public office-holders owning company shares.
The so-called Cirami law introduced the notion of legitimate
suspicion against the judiciary. If a defendant believes
the judge is biased, he can now have his trial transferred to
another location.
Half a million people demonstrated in Rome two years ago against
the governments attack on the judiciary. On November 24
of this year, judges and public prosecutors went on strike against
the planned reforms. Berlusconi derogatorily referred to them
as the red robes, having remarked previously that
judges were mentally disturbed and anthropologically
different from the rest of the human race.
On December 16, the day Ciampi vetoed the justice reforms,
parliament passed, by a small majority, a new, highly controversial
bill that shortens the statute of limitations. The bill was immediately
given the nickname Salva Previti (Save Previti), as
it amounted to an amnesty for Berlusconis lawyer Cesare
Previti, who was sentenced last year to 11 years in prison for
bribing judges.
The new bill could lead to the discontinuation of hundreds,
if not thousands, of trials and is tailor-made for several current
members of the government. Berlusconi himself, as well as Marcello
DellUtri, are among those who stand to benefit.
DellUtri, Berlusconis long-time confidant and the
founder and deputy chairman of Forza Italia, was sentenced on
December 11 to nine years in prison for collusion with the mafia.
According the judge, DellUtri was the guarantor of
the mafias interests in Berlusconis Fininvest holding
company and a representative of La Cosa Nostra.
In Berlusconis case, numbers of criminal proceedings
have been initiated against him for falsifying company accounts,
fraud and corruption. This month, rulings were handed down by
a Milan court regarding two counts of bribing a judge. Prosecutor
Ilda Boccassini had sought an eight-year jail term, but Berlusconi
was acquitted on grounds of extenuating circumstances and the
statute of limitations.
Conflict within the ruling class
Berlusconi, who is simultaneously Italys prime minister,
its richest citizen, and owner of the countrys largest media
corporation, is pursuing two aims in his long-standing campaign
against the judiciary: first, he wants to protect himself and
his companies from prosecution; second, he wants to loosen legal
restrictions on the activities of the Italian corporate elite.
Berlusconi represents a section of the ruling class that seeks
to free itself from the traditional forms of bourgeois parliamentary
democracy and establish more authoritarian forms of rule in order
to more effectively attack the rights and living standards of
the working class.
His opponents in the judicial apparatus and the judges
association, the ANM (Assoziazione Nazionale Magistratura), represent
a faction of the Italian bourgeoisie that fears the politically
and socially destabilising implications of Berlusconis gangster
methods. To this camp also belong the politicians of the centre-left
opposition and a section of the trade union bureaucracy.
A representative of this faction is Antonio Di Pietro, party
chairman of Italia dei Valori (Italy of Values) and a member of
the European Union (EU) parliament. After the sentencing of DellUtri,
Di Pietro clamoured for Berlusconis resignation and for
new elections. This political class is not worthy of ruling
this country, he declared.
Twelve years ago, Di Pietro worked as a state prosecutor during
Operation Clean Hands (Mani Pulite), a campaign against official
corruption. This drive against pervasive corruption within the
largest post-war political parties marked, in the final analysis,
a new orientation for the Italian bourgeoisie, and paved the way
for legal changes in the field of economic and social policy.
It aimed at creating better conditions for Italy to participate
in the European Monetary Union and adopt the new European currency,
the euro. The so-called tangentopolithe expensive
system of slush funds and favourswas viewed as a barrier
to the success of Italy in the global economy.
Mani Pulite brought scores of prominent figures from the political
and business worlds before the courts and sent them to prison,
thereby playing a key role in the break-up of the largest post-war
partiesthe Christian Democrats and the Socialists. A political
vacuum arose as a result. Due primarily to the influence of the
Stalinist Communist Party of Italy (PCI), the working class remained
passive and disoriented, allowing Forza Italia and the neo-fascists
to profit. This was the time of Berlusconis rise to prominence.
One of the current spokesmen of the anti-Berlusconi faction
is Romano Prodi. Last November, Prodi was replaced as president
of the EU Commission and has since been promoting himself as a
challenger to Berlusconi in the 2006 elections.
Prodi is far from an unknown quantity. From 1996 to 1998, he
was prime minister and led a vicious campaign of budget cuts to
secure Italys entry into the European Monetary Union. His
government initiated attacks on the Italian pension system that
have since escalated.
Today, Prodi is supported by all of the centre-left parties,
as well as the Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation
PartyPRC), one of the remnants of the PCI. Six months ago,
the PRC affiliated with the Olive Tree alliance to form the Great
Democratic Alliance (GAD). During the one-day strike on November
30 against the Berlusconi government, Prodi, as the main spokesman
of the demonstration in Rome, called for a movement for
the political rebirth of the country. At a meeting of the
Olive Tree alliance in Milan, Prodi was greeted with a standing
ovation.
President Ciampi also played a leading political role in the
1990s. Between the spring of 1993 and the spring of 1994, he stood
at the head of an interim government that abolished the automatic
indexation of wages to inflation, implemented an extensive privatisation
program, and introduced a new electoral law that aided Berlusconis
rise to power. From 1996 to 1999, he served as Treasury head under
the governments of Prodi and Massimo DAlema, who headed
the Democratic Left party, another outgrowth of the disintegration
of the PCI. The DAlema government enforced a ban on strikes
for the first time since the end of the Word War II and led the
country into the Kosovo war, circumventing parliament to do so.
These same politicians and parties, which today are the loudest
in their criticisms of Berlusconi, carried out the previous attacks
on the population that led to popular frustration and disappointment
and paved the way for the Berlusconi government. They continue
to support Berlusconis war on terror, in the
name of which fundamental democratic rights are being destroyed.
The justice reforms of the Berlusconi government
represent a renewed attack on democratic rights and a further
step towards the establishment of dictatorial forms of rule. However,
the struggle against them cannot be entrusted to the capitalist
judiciary system or the centre-left opposition. It can be waged
only through the mobilisation of the working population on the
basis of an international socialist perspective.
See Also:
Italy: Court overturns Berlusconis
immunity law
[23 January 2004]
The Parmalat scandal: Europes
ten-billion euro black hole
[6 January 2004]
Italy: Berlusconi
intensifies his attacks on the judiciary
[19 September 2003]
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