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WSWS : News
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Italy: Clear majority rejects Berlusconis constitutional
reform
By Marianne Arens and Peter Schwarz
4 July 2006
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At the end of June, Italian voters decisively rejected the
constitutional reform pushed through parliament by the right-wing
coalition under former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi prior
to losing the recent national election. Almost 62 percent opposed
the reform, with only 38 percent voting for it.
It is the third defeat in a row for the Berlusconi camp. While
the latter only narrowly lost Aprils parliamentary election,
its losses in local elections held in May were substantially higher,
and the clear rejection of the constitutional reform has surprised
many observers.
The No votes clearly outweighed the Yes,
even in the north, the stronghold of the separatist Lega Nord
(Northern League), and a region where the Berlusconi camp won
several million votes in the April elections. The two regions
of Lombardy and Veneto were something of an exception, but even
here, the cities of Milan and Venice rejected the constitutional
reform. In Rome, more than two thirds of those who turned out
voted against the measure.
The participation by 53 percent of eligible voters far exceeded
expectations. A combination of circumstancesvoters having
gone to the polls three times within the last three months, the
oppressive heat and the Italian national team playing a World
Cup matchhad led many pundits to predict a far smaller turnout.
Five years earlier, only 34 percent of those eligible voted in
a constitutional reform. Corriere della Sera, the prominent
daily newspaper, commented, It is a happy surprise
that predictions of a tired and discouraged public proved untrue.
Berlusconis reform threatened principles that were introduced
into the Italian constitution after the collapse of the fascist
Mussolini regime in 1943. Berlusconi planned to extend presidential
powers to the prime minister, destroying the system of checks
and balancesthe mutual control of the constitutional
bodies, head of government, federal president, chamber of deputies,
senate and the judiciarythat are supposed to prevent the
return of a dictatorial regime. He also planned to increase regionalisation
and thus hasten the creeping dissolution of the unitary Italian
state created in 1861.
The reform involved the amendment of 50 of the 139 articles
in the 1948 constitution. The measures were cobbled together in
great haste. According to Berlusconi, it had taken just three
days for representatives of the government parties to write the
new constitutional text, while sipping red wine and eating polenta
in a mountain retreat in the Dolomites.
The amendments were drawn up in such a dilettantish manner
that they also encountered fierce opposition from constitutional
lawyers. Some 178 professors of constitutional law and 17 former
presidents and vice-presidents of the constitutional court warned
of a dangerous reform, which provided the prime minister
with untenable authority and which would provoke numerous
disputes because of its ill-conceived nature.
Under the proposed reforms, the head of government (prime minister),
whom the current constitution titles the President of the
Council of Ministers, and is a sort of first among equals,
would be directly elected by the people as prime minister,
and would no longer be appointed by the federal president. He
or she would have the right to appoint or dismiss ministers and
dissolve parliament, all prerogatives that are currently the preserve
of the president. In addition, he or she would decide the course
of general policy as a guiding authority.
Within the context of devoluzione (devolution), the
20 Italian regions would have received greater powers under the
reform proposal, including control of the health system
and schools, with their curriculum, as well as responsibility
for the regional and local police. However, there were no plans
to provide any financial transfer payments to bring equality to
the different regions.
This would have inevitably led to a deepening of the social
gulf between Italys north and south, and to substantial
attacks on fundamental rights such as education and health care
for the population in the poorer southern regions. Devoluzione
was a concession to the Umberto Bossis Northern League,
which belonged to Berlusconis center-right coalition. The
Lega supports greater autonomy for the prosperous north and has
sometimes demanded the establishment of a separate state.
Berlusconis constitutional reforms were passed in parliament
against the votes of the then opposition, which now forms the
present government. The new head of government, Romano Prodi,
advocated a No in the referendum, while Berlusconi
strove to frame the issue as a kind of plebiscite on the new governmenta
tactic that thoroughly backfired.
Prodi immediately made clear, however, that he agreed in principle
with the general direction of the proposals, and offered to hold
discussions with the opposition about constitutional reforms.
The government has an obligation to begin a dialogue with
all parties, he said, which should happen as quickly as
possible.
The Lega Nord immediately responded to Prodis
offer. Roberto Maroni, the Legas second in command
and an employment minister under Berlusconi, suggested a possible
change in coalition partners. Political alliances are for
us a tactical affair. We group together with forces that can help
us to federalise Italy, he told the newspaper La Repubblica.
While Berlusconi has increasingly lost influence since the
change of government in Rome, various members of his coalition
are leaving the sinking ship. As well as the Lega Nord,
the Christian Democrats are also looking around for new coalition
possibilities. They continued to support Berlusconi only as long
as he could secure power and influence for them. And there are
even signs of dissent in Berlusconis own party, Forza
Italia.
Meanwhile, Berlusconi and his closest collaborators are sinking
in a swamp of corruption scandals, against which they can no longer
protect themselves since losing control of the levers of power.
The headlines have recently been full of the arrest of Prince
Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy, the son of the last Italian king.
The prince is under house arrest, accused of corruption, fraud
and the exploitation of prostitutes. The Berlusconi government
had passed a constitutional amendment in 2002 permitting Italys
heir apparent to return after 56 years in exile. Within months,
the Prince of Savoy was heading a criminal gang in the gaming
city of Campione. Some 13 other people are accused with him, including
the press spokesman of Berlusconis foreign minister Gianfranco
Fini, the leader of the post-fascist National Alliance.
However , the Prince of Savoy is only one of many wealthy and
illustrious members of the Italian elite who have pursued their
dubious business in the shadow of the Berlusconi government.
The 36-year-old Raffaele Fitto, president of the Puglia region
and a member of Berlusconis Forza Italia, was caught
out when he demanded a 500,000 euro (US$640,000) bribe for a construction
contract. The Christian Democrat Salvatore Cuffaro, president
of the Sicilian region, is under suspicion of having had contact
with the Mafia. Cesare Previti, an ex-defense minister and a close
friend and personal lawyer of Berlusconi, faces a spell in prison
after the constitutional court overturned a law that had granted
him an amnesty for bribing judges. The real estate broker Stefano
Ricucci is already in jail after he had tried to buy the daily
paper Corriere della Sera using some 400 million euros
(US$512 million) in illegal funds on behalf of a financier who
is close to Berlusconi.
And finally, Berlusconis football club AC Milan is under
suspicion of having been involved in the systematic manipulation
of games, a scandal that is presently shaking the Italian sports
world and whose significance cannot be underestimated.
While Berlusconis world is now collapsing like
a house of cards, as one commentator described it, the Prodi
government is preparing to carry out the tasks that the ruling
class expects of it and for which Berlusconi proved too weak:
consolidating the budget through welfare cuts and increasing taxes
for the masses, making the job market more flexible, and continuing
the military deployment in Afghanistan. In the autumn, parliament
will face the first vote on the new budget.
So far, Prodi has been able to rely on the successor organisations
of the Italian Communist Partythe Left Democrats, the Italian
Communists and Rifondazione Comunista. These parties kept
their members and voters in line by telling them it was only possible
to remove Berlusconi from power by supporting Prodi. Now that
Berlusconi is gone, this will prove much harder.
But Prodi has taken precautions. The fragmenting of the right-wing
camp now offers him new potential coalition partners. The Italian
party landscape could once again enter into flux. The service
that the so-called left can now attempt to provide
is to support the bourgeois regime long enough to prevent the
development of an independent movement of the working class in
Italy, while the ruling elite once again reorganises itself.
See Also:
Prodi government takes power
in Italy: a right-wing regime with a left fig leaf
[20 May 2006]
Center-left alliance wins
Italian election by razor-thin majority
[12 April 2006]
Italian election campaign
begins with anti-Berlusconi opposition backing austerity candidate
[23 February 2006]
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