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Former fascist elected mayor of Rome
By Marianne Arens
3 May 2008
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Two weeks after the victory of Silvio Berlusconi in the Italian
parliamentary elections, the city of Rome, which for decades has
been governed by centre-left parties, has fallen into the hands
of the right wing. On April 28, Gianni Alemanno, a long-time member
of the fascist movement with close links to prominent right-wing
extremists, was elected mayor of the Italian capital.
In the mid-1990s, Alemanno had participated in the so-called
Fiuggi turn, whereby a majority of Italian neo-fascists
distanced themselves from the cult surrounding the figure of former
fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and founded the National Alliance
(NA) based on national conservative values. Nevertheless,
when Alemannos victory was announced at the start of the
week, his supporters responded in a manner powerfully evoking
Italy under the dictator Mussolini. Chanting Duce, Duce
they celebrated their so-called liberation of Rome
by giving fascist salutes in front of the citys town hall.
Mussolinis granddaughter, Alessandra Mussolini, was jubilant
because the election of Alemanno took place exactly 63 years after
the shooting of her grandfather by anti-fascist partisans.
As a youth, the now 50-year-old Gianni Alemanno had joined
the youth front of the fascist Movimento Sociale Italiano
(MSI) and had a reputation for hooliganism in his activities as
a fascist ringleader. In 1988, he took over the leadership of
the youth front from Gianfranco Fini, who today heads the NA.
Alemanno is married to the daughter of Pino Rautis, who founded
the MSI in 1946 and went on to set up the extreme-right terrorist
organization Ordine Nuovo (New Order) in 1956. Today he leads
his own ultra-right grouping.
Unlike his father-in-law, Alemanno joined the NA in 1994, but
he always belonged to the organisations right wingthe
so-called Destra Social (Social Right). The most important representative
of Destra Sociale, Francesco Storace, has since split with the
NA to form another ultra-right party, La Destra (The Right). La
Destra supported Alemannos election campaign in Rome.
Between 2001 and 2006, Alemanno was also secretary of agriculture
in Silvio Berlusconis second government.
Although Alemanno trailed behind the candidate of the newly
formed Democratic Party, Francesco Rutelli, in the first round
of voting, he was able to emerge victorious in the second ballot
held last weekend with a surprisingly comfortable lead of 53.7
to 46.3 percent of the vote. The election turnout of 63 percent
was over 10 percent lower than in the first ballot, which had
taken place at the same time as the parliamentary elections.
As is the case with the reelection of Silvio Berlusconi as
head of government 14 days ago, this latest result raises a serious
question: How is it possible for a fascist politician such as
Gianni Alemanno to be elected as mayor of Rome, which is both
the Italian capital and a leading European cultural metropolis?
Immediately after the election the defeated opposition candidate,
Francesco Rutelli, blamed a general turn to the right
by the population for his defeat. In reality, the answer lies
with his own policies.
For years the politicians now leading the Democratic Party
have unquestioningly implemented pro-business policies and therefore
bear responsibility for the citys increasing social polarization.
In the course of their decades in power they were able to rely
on political support from such organisations as Rifondazione Comunista
(Communist Refoundation), while the right wing was able to demagogically
exploit the fears and worries of the population. This same process
resulted in the government led by Romano Prodi being voted out
after just two years in office. Now the consequences for Rome
have been even more dramatic.
Rome, with its population of 2.7 million, has been governed
for the past 15 years by administrations led by the two most important
figures in the new Democratic Party, Francesco Rutelli and Walter
Veltroni. Rutelli, leader of the Christian-democratic alliance
Margherita, was mayor from 1993 to 2001. Veltroni, a long-time
functionary of the now defunct Italian Communist Party, then a
leading member of the Left Democrats, was mayor from 2001 to 2008.
Then following an initiative by Veltroni, the Left Democrats united
with Margherita to form the Democratic Party last year.
Both Rutelli and Veltroni had won international praise for
their work in improving the ambience of the eternal city
by modernizing the citys traffic system and restoring the
citys outstanding cultural heritage. Veltroni was at home
amongst cinema and artistic circles and even founded Romes
own film festival in 2006.
But above all, it was tourists and the citys own upper-middle
classes who were able to profit from such policies. On the fringes
of society and in the suburbs outside of the immediate city centre,
hundreds of thousands were condemned to a struggle to surviveemployed
in low-paid, so-called precarious jobs, while food and energy
prices have risen dramatically. Less well-off families confront
declining education and training opportunities for their children
and are forced to pay high rents for unhealthy and small dwellings.
The elderly are forced to eke out their retirement with miserly
pensions made even worse by inflation. In the meantime, the crisis
of the quarta settimanathe fourth week of the
month when the family purse is emptyhas become widespread.
Rome has undergone an unprecedented social decline during the
past 15 years. Soup kitchens have registered a sharp growth in
poverty, with many single pensioners dependent on handouts and
unable to survive on the minimum pension of 500 per month.
An estimated 10,000 lack any proper accommodations, with around
4,000 living directly on the streets. The newspaper Repubblica
writes: The new poor are spreading both geographically and
numerically and can be found on river banks, railway embankments
and in barracks, tents and corrugated sheet dwellings under motorway
bridges.
Above all, there is a lack of reasonably paid jobs for young
people. According to a report by the Caritas welfare organisation,
around one third of those who receive food packages in the centre
of Rome are between 18 and 35 years of age and have no income,
although many of them have a good education or university degree.
There is also a marked increase in the number of entire families
coming to the welfare centres.
Under these conditions, Gianni Alemanno has been able to profit
from social discontent and frustration. In his populist campaign
he promised all manner of things: We will free Rome of fear,
decline and poverty, he proclaimed, and among his list of
promises was an increase in pensions.
He also sought to demagogically exploit the appalling living
conditions in many of the citys suburbs, where large numbers
of immigrants lacking proper residency permits live in slums.
In playing the nationalist and racist card, Alemanno singled out
immigrants from Romania, particularly Sinti and Roma, calling
for the deportation of 20,000 criminal foreigners.
On this issue he was able to rely on the backing of the Democrats.
Instead of addressing the urgent social questions that underlie
the tensions between different nationalities, the Democrats joined
in the anti-immigrant chorus. It was no less a figure than Walter
Veltroni who had pressurised the Prodi government to pass a decree
for the classification of all European Union citizens who constituted
a threat to public security. And for his part, Francesco
Rutelli reacted to his defeat by declaring that the problem was
that the left had not been able to dominate in the
debate over security issues.
There had been a similar reaction in the case of the former
trade union secretary and role model of Italian petty-bourgeois
radical circles, Sergio Cofferati, who after being elected mayor
of Bologna launched a draconian law-and-order campaign aimed at
ridding the city of immigrants.
There can be no doubt that the policies of the government led
by Romano Prodi also played a role in the election results in
Rome. Both Veltroni and Rutelli are directly identified with the
Prodi administration. Rutelli was culture minister and vice-prime
minister in the Prodi government, and Veltroni was expected to
take over Prodis political role as leader of the Democrats.
Just two years ago, Veltroni won over 60 percent of the vote in
the first round of the Rome elections, soundly defeating Alemanno.
Now positions have been reversed in the election held last weekend.
See Also:
The collapse of Rifondazione
Comunista in Italy
The price of opportunism
[25 April 2008]
Collapse of left
parties enables Berlusconi to win Italian election
[16 April 2008]
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