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Berlusconi suffers major defeat in Italian regional elections
By Peter Schwarz
9 April 2005
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It was anticipated that Italys ruling right-wing coalition
would suffer losses in the Italian regional elections held last
weekend (April 3-4), but the result far exceeded expectations.
Most commentaries spoke of a landslide and debacle
for Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. The newspaper Corriere
della Sera, which is not at all hostile to the government,
declared that Italians had cut Berlusconi down to size.
Berlusconis alliance of right-wing parties, called the
House of Freedom, which has governed the country for four years,
lost in 11 of the 13 regions in which elections were held to the
centre-left alliance called lUnione (the Union),
led by the former European Union commission president Romano Prodi.
Berlusconis coalition ceded control of 5 regions that it
held going into the elections, and was able to maintain power
only in the regions of Lombardy and Venice in Italys wealthy
north. The Prodi camp retained power in the 5 regions it already
controlled and won a further 6.
Out of a total of 20 Italian regions, 16 are now in the hands
of the opposition. Alongside Lombardy and Venice, only Sicily
and the small region of Molise, 2 regions that did not hold elections
last weekend, are still governed by Berlusconi and his allies.
In the last comparable regional elections, held in 2000, the
Berlusconi camp won 53 percent of the vote, with the opposition
(then called the Olive Tree Alliance) gaining just 44 percent.
This time, the figures were exactly reversed.
The election turnout of 72 percent was only slightly lower
than five years ago. A substantially smaller participation had
been expected as a result of the massive media barrage over the
death of the pope.
The regional elections are traditionally regarded as a measure
of the popular mood in advance of national parliamentary elections.
These are set for 2006.
In last weekends poll, approximately two thirds of the
electorate were called upon to select regional governments, as
well as some 360 city and provincial parliaments.
When the Olive Tree Alliance suffered a defeat five years ago
similar to that handed to the right-wing parties in last weekends
vote, the head of the government at that time, Massimo dAlema,
a Left Democrat, resigned. The following year, Berlusconis
right-wing alliance won the national parliamentary election by
a clear majority.
Berlusconi, however, does not have the slightest intention
of responding in a similar manner to his own election debacle.
In the run-up to the elections, he had dismissed them as a purely
regional affair without any national significance. After the result
was announced, his party assigned blame for the defeat to the
House of Freedom regional candidates. Berlusconis line was
that he had not intervened in the election campaign, and the result
could not, consequently, be considered a referendum on his policies.
Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether the Berlusconi government
can survive this electoral disaster. The result has already led
to public recriminations within the right-wing coalition and sparked
a severe crisis.
Although the election losses were predominantly suffered by
Berlusconis own party, Forza Italia, he has sought to shift
the blame onto his partys alliesthe post-fascist National
Alliance and the Christian Democratic Union. Berlusconi has accused
both partners of tearing apart the alliance with their daily
quarrels.
For their part, the leaders of these two organisations are
bitter over the fact that in their traditional centres in the
south of the country, all regions, with exception of Sicily, are
now under the control of the opposition. They have demanded that
Berlusconi make policy corrections, which he immediately rejected.
Gianfranco Fini, head of the National Alliance and foreign
affairs minister, demanded the government pay more attention to
economic and social problems and no longer give the impression
that it favours the north. Voters made clear that we must
change course, he said. A Christian Democratic deputy even
called the election a referendum on Berlusconia
comment that is said to have outraged the prime minister.
There is little political agreement between the constituent
parties in the government coalitionForza Italia, the National
Alliance, the Christian Democratic Union, and the Northern League,
which is active only in the north of the country. The alliance
has been held together only by its desire to hold onto power.
As long as Berlusconi was able to keep the coalition securely
in power with the help of his media empire and his populist demagogy,
his partners remained loyal. But as soon as Berlusconis
popularity began to wane, conflicts within the coalition broke
out in the open.
Romano Prodi assessed the election result as a call for the
opposition to take over the national government. However, he made
no demands for Berlusconis resignation and declared that
his alliance was merely preparing to assume governmental power
next year. Italy needs stability, hope and unity. My task
is to fulfil these expectations, he said.
These are remarkable words. The election result is primarily
the result of the enormous political and social polarisation in
the country. The positive result for Prodis alliance expresses
a widespread rejection of the Berlusconi government, rather than
support for Prodis program, which differs only insignificantly
from that of Berlusconi himself. In 2001, the centre-left government
was voted out office after it had undertaken major attacks on
the working population.
If Prodi now refrains from demanding the prime ministers
resignation and appeals for stability and national unity, this
underscores his determination to contain the popular opposition
to the Berlusconi government. The last thing Prodi and his alliesincluding
the Democratic Left and Communist Refoundationwant is to
take power under conditions in which broad layers of the working
class are politically and socially mobilised.
Resistance to the Berlusconi government has developed over
a period of years. A large majority of the population rejected
Italys participation in the Iraq war alongside the US. At
that time, millions took to the streets in Italy to oppose the
war.
The kidnapping in Iraq of Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena
followed by the killing of the man who negotiated her release,
Nicola Calipari, by a US military patrol served to revive anti-war
sentiment in the spring of this year.
In addition, Italian voters have grown increasingly disillusioned
with broken promises made by the demagogic Berlusconi. Opposition
has grown to welfare cuts, anger has increased over sinking living
standards, and indignation has risen over the way the head of
government has used his office to feather his own nest.
Among other things, Berlusconi had promised generous tax reductions
for average earners, but the measure proved farcical when the
government permitted substantial increases in a range of fees
for public services. The end result was a significant loss of
purchasing power for ordinary working people.
Despite the fact that Berlusconi owns Italys largest
private television outlets and several newspapers, and as head
of government assumed control of the countrys public television
system, his enormous propaganda offensive was less and less able
to mute popular discontent.
Berlusconis right-wing alliance suffered particularly
spectacular defeats in several regions. In Apulia, which lies
in the heel of the Italian boot, Nicchi Vendola was elected as
regional president. Vendola is a member of Communist Refoundation
(Rifondazione Comunista), calls himself a communist, and has not
sought to conceal the fact that he is gay. Such a development
would have been inconceivable in Italys conservative and
Catholic south a few years ago.
The defeat in the region of Latium, which includes the capital
city Rome, was an especially serious loss for the government coalition.
Prior to the elections, the acting regional president, Francesco
Storace (National Alliance), had said, If I lose, Berlusconis
successor will be called Prodi.
There had been speculation as to whether the campaign of an
ultra-right-wing organisation led by the granddaughter of the
Duce, Alexandra Mussolini, could cost Storace his majority. In
the event, the victory of the Union candidate was so clear that
Storace could not blame his defeat on the 2 percent of the vote
that ultimately went to Mussolini.
While the present state of affairs points to a change of government
next year, such a development would do nothing to solve the problems
confronting the mass of the population. In fact, the political
character of the Prodi alliance offers Berlusconi a chance even
now to win the coming parliamentary election.
The forces predominating in the Prodi alliance are conservative
bourgeois parties and politicians who, like Prodi himself, reject
any mobilisation of the working class. The so-called left
parties in the alliance, such as Communist Refoundation, fulfil
the task of providing a left cover for politicians committed to
imposing whatever attacks on the working class are necessary to
make Italian capitalism more competitive within the global market
economy.
See Also:
Italy: Rifondazione joins
with Prodi
[28 March 2005]
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