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Italy: Communist Refoundation gives Prodi a blank check for
right-wing policies
By Dietmar Henning and Marianne Arens
26 February 2007
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Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi is preparing to resume
his duties as head of government following his sudden resignation
last week. On Saturday, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano rejected
Prodis resignation and asked him to organise votes of confidence
this week in both chambers of parliament. Should he obtain a majority,
he is to continue to govern as head of his center-left coalition.
This latest development makes clear that Prodis resignation
was aimed at imposing discipline within his governing coalition
of nine parties. Prodi was particularly keen to bring into line
his coalition partner Communist Refoundation (Rifondazione Comunista)the
Stalinist successor party to the dissolved Italian Communist Party.
Despite the partys participation in the ruling coalition,
representatives of Communist Refoundation took part recently in
protests against the government.
Just a week ago, more than 100,000 people marched in the northern
city of Vicenza to oppose the Prodi governments support
for US plans to expand its Ederle military base in the city. The
demonstration also denounced the deployment of Italian troops
in Afghanistan, the US war in Iraq, and the Italian governments
collusion with American militarism. Banners bearing the slogan
Shame On You, Prodi were prominent on the march, in
which some Communist Refoundation functionaries took part.
Four days later, on February 21, Communist Refoundation Senator
Franco Turigliatto joined with Fernando Rossi of the Italian Communist-Green
Party and a handful of conservative senators-for-life in abstaining
in a vote on the foreign policy of the Prodi coalition. The foreign
policy motion called for support for the governments plans
to increase the deployment of Italian troops in Afghanistan and
expand the US base in Vicenza. The latter move is widely regarded
as an important element in plans for a US military strike against
Iran.
As a result of the abstentions, the motion was defeated. To
the surprise of many, Prodi immediately tendered his resignation,
but President Napolitano called on him to continue the affairs
of state until a solution to the crisis could be found.
On Thursday night Prodi assembled a number of party chiefs
of his Unione coalition for a crisis meeting which lasted into
the early morning. At the meeting Prodi presented his coalition
partners with an ultimatum. He submitted a 12-point programme
and demanded that they accept and unconditionally support it,
or he would definitively step down as prime minister and remove
himself from political life. All of those present, including Franco
Giordano, the head of Communist Refoundation, agreed to Prodis
terms.
A number of leaders of so-called left parties in
the coalition attempted to justify their capitulation to Prodi
by arguing it was the only way to prevent a return to power by
the right-wing government of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.
In fact, by signing on to Prodis 12-point programme, they
pledged their support for policies that could have been dictated
by Berlusconi.
The 12 points are directed against the demands being raised
by broad sections of the population that have taken to the streets
in a series of major demonstrations in recent months. In their
totality, the demands represent an open challenge to the working
class.
The first point is for a continuation of Italys current
military missions in Afghanistan and Lebanon and the expansion
of the US base at Vicenza. International obligations will
be respected, the text declares, and then goes on to specify
these obligations: Stable support for our foreign policy
and defence initiatives within the context of the UN and our international
obligations arising from the European Union and the Atlantic Alliancein
particular, our current task in the Afghanistan mission.
A renewed vote on financing of the Afghanistan mission is to be
held within the next three weeks.
Another point affirms plans for Italian ports to acquire technology
to process liquefied gas, in order to decrease Italys dependence
on oil and gas supplies from Russia. This represents a repudiation
of recent protests by environmental groups opposing such a development.
In other points, Prodi affirms his intention to press ahead
with attacks on the conditions of working people at home, including
so-called liberalisation in the fields of education,
trade, services and pensions. Prodi is insisting on a standardisation
of pension schemes.
The background to this project is a debate that took place
within the government at the beginning of the year. Communist
Refoundation had sought a return to the system that had been abolished
by the previous Berlusconi government. The post-war system awarded
a full pension from the age of 57 for all workers who had paid
pension contributions for at least 35 years. Prodi wants to avoid
a return to this system and favours instead an increase in the
retirement age together with a turn to private pension schemes.
Point 3 of the programme commits all coalition parties to support
large-scale infrastructure projects such as the European high-speed
train link (TAVTreno adAlta Velocità) from
Lyon to Turin. The construction of the TAV route requires, among
other things, the construction of a huge tunnel. This plan has
been opposed for months by a local protest movement backed by
Communist Refoundation and the Greens.
A section on family policy affirms the traditional conservative
form of family life. The so-called Dico, which affirmed
equal opportunity for both heterosexual and homosexual partnerships,
has been struck from the government programme. The Vatican and
Christian Democrats had in recent weeks organised a virulent campaign
against this measure.
Points 11 and 12 are especially noteworthy. In these, Prodi
demands authority to operate without any effective check by his
coalition partners.
In future, Prodi alone will have the authority to resolve conflicts
within the coalition. Silvio Sircana, the speaker for the prime
minister, will speak on behalf of the entire government, and Prodi
will be able to take an independent stance on any issues in dispute
within the Unione coalition.
The newspaper Il Manifesto featured a photo of Prodi
on its front page with the headline: LUnione sono
Io (I am the Union), a reference to the utterance
of French King Louis XIV: I am the state.
With their acceptance of the 12 points, the nine government
parties, including Communist Refoundation, the Left Democrats
and the Greens, have given their support to policies that represent
a further major turn to the right by the Prodi government. They
have given their seal of approval to further social and welfare
cuts and Italys imperialist foreign policy. In addition,
they have agreed to increase Prodis authority at the expense
of their own political influence.
The capitulation by the government parties is no guarantee
against further cabinet crises. Prodi still has a wafer-thin majority
in the Senate and can place no reliance on the lifetime senators.
He is therefore continuing to seek out other partners. To this
end, Prodi has contacted the Christian Democrat Marco Follini.
Some months ago, Follini broke from the right-wing Casa delle
libertà (House of Freedom) and formed a new party called
Italia di mezzo (Italy of the Center). Follini, who was formerly
the head of the opposition Christian Democrats and for a period
vice-premier under Berlusconi, is now ready to support Prodi in
the upcoming confidence votes. In a newspaper interview, Follini
declared that what was necessary was a stable and effective government
based on a new constellation of center-left forces.
This latest cabinet crisis thoroughly exposes the so-called
left parties, above all, Communist Refoundation. This
Stalinist organisation has repeatedly justified its participation
in government by declaring it would operate as a voice of
the people and use the government as a platform to argue
for popular interests. In fact, just the opposite has taken place.
Communist Refoundation is playing the key role in maintaining
a right-wing government that is acting in open defiance of the
wishes of the broad majority of working people.
In order to pursue this reactionary policy, the party leadership
has initiated a purge of dissident elements. Following Prodis
resignation, Turigliatto, the Communist Refoundation senator who
abstained in last weeks foreign policy vote, was publicly
denounced by his own party and threatened with expulsion. He immediately
resigned his mandate in the senate.
On Sunday, Communist Refoundation called for demonstrations
in support of Prodi to be held across the country.
See Also:
Italian prime minister resigns after
losing foreign policy vote
[23 February 2007]
Italy: 100,000 demonstrate against expansion
of US base in Vicenza
[22 February 2007]
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