Article published by "Open Democracy"  on August 12 2013
It is never
easy to write  about the  Italian political situation, but after  the 
verdict handed out by the highest court confirming a four year jail
sentence, for tax fraud,  against
the  previously indestructible former
Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi,  epochal questions arise over the future of
this  fragile government,  over 
Mr. Berlusconi himself and, even more so, over  Italy’s 
own political destiny.
 More than ever before,  Mr. Berlusconi’s actions and behaviour  bring to mind Charles Dickens’ “Artful
Dodger”,  even up to the words of
defiance  uttered  very shortly after  the 
news of the verdict reached him, and reiterated in a much
publicized  pubic appearance a few days
later. However, unlike Oliver Twist's friend, Berlusconi will not end up in a
penal colony, or, indeed, in a prison cell, but will continue to be an
uncomfortable presence in  Italian
political life and will pose a real threat to the  government’s stability and  survival.
The government’s survival
It has to
be remembered that the present Government in Italy has one of the largest
majorities in the Republic’s history, bringing together, after weeks of sterile
negotiations, the two main political parties,  Berlusconi’s “People of Liberty” and the  Centre-Left “Democratic Party”, until
recently   opponents in a cut-throat
electoral campaign, unprecedented for 
its acrimony and verbal violence.  Paradoxically, however, this  vast, apparently unassailable majority, does
not keep the government alliance  from
being extremely fragile and  unstable,
held together  mainly by the  fear, shared by both protagonists, of having
to face the angry and disillusioned Italian electorate again after an election,
held in February, which had cost both of them millions of votes, most of which
went to Beppe Grillo’s maverick “Five Stars” movement, a veritable thorn in the
side of both  the leading parties.
After
the  verdict delivered on the first of
August, more than one political commentator has defined the Government as a
“dead man walking”, the main burden falling not on Berlusconi’s movement but on
the   majority Democratic party who will
have a difficult time explaining to their electorate  their choice to continue sharing  the burdens of government with a  party led by a  convicted felon. The next few days,
therefore, will be quite crucial in determining whether this  brave experiment at a “grand coalition” will
have any chance of survival beyond the Summer. 
At the
moment, after 100 days in which virtually nothing has been achieved,  one has the eerie feeling of  witnessing 
an oneiric situation, in which the members of the government are clinging
to a raft which is floating out of control down a  treacherous river. They know that the rapids
are  not far away, but dare not touch the
shores (i.e. end the experiment and  call
early elections) because they know that these are populated by hostile tribes,
and  thence the brave   insistence that “the show must go on” for
the good of the country,
The  prevailing feeling, however,  is that, 
sooner or later, some catalytic event will cause the   government’s 
implosion, the only question  
being how long this situation can endure.
Mr. Berlusconi’s future
But what
about Berlusconi himself? Has he really reached the end of his political
career? Many would wish to think so, but he has been written off more than once
in the past and has always  managed to
stage  an incredible comeback. According
to recent legislation, no person  having
been sentenced to two years or more imprisonment   should be allowed to sit in Parliament: and
here comes the first uncertainty which will have to be tackled by his  present 
allies:  Berlusconi has been
sentenced to  four years, but, according
to  another  strange instrument of Italian legislation,
the first three years of his sentence are condoned, and so, “de facto” he
should serve only one year.  A  political-legal battle will take place  to determine which of these terms  needs to be considered, and  further 
doubts arise as to whether the Democratic Party will, in any case,   find the political courage to vote for the
removal from the Senate of the  leader of
their  principal ally in Government. By
the month of October,  an additional
sentence of up to three years’ interdiction from public office will
probably  be  issued, but this should not necessarily stop
him from running his political party “from the outside”, just as Beppe Grillo
has done, being interdicted from seeking office because of a  preceding penal sentence. By playing the part
of an innocent victim of a “left-wing judicial conspiracy”, Berlusconi could
even increase his party’s as well as his own  popularity and cause further turmoil on the
Italian political scene: the paradox here would be  that the Democratic Party would end up being damaged  more than any other, because of the
verdict  against its main opponent.
There has
been insistent talk of asking the President of the Republic, Giorgio
Napolitano, to grant Berlusconi a “presidential pardon”, but there are strong
doubts as to whether this path will be undertaken, also in view of the fact
that Mr. Berlusconi is facing even stiffer sentences in the near future, for
crimes  of a rather graver nature, among
which the accusation of having had sexual relations with  a minor.
Last Sunday
a large demonstration by Berlusconi supporters was planned in the Centre of
Rome. Buses were laid on, and the participants were offered a free meal. The
crowd was  vociferous, but  disappointingly scanty, and this is also a
factor that Berlusconi needs to consider before 
taking any  potentially rash
decisions.
The real
question goes well beyond Berlusconi’s personal fate or the Government’s
immediate  chances of survival, and
concerns the  future of the democratic
process itself in a country  in the
throes of an economic, political and moral crisis  unprecedented since the immediate post-war
years. Italy  ’s
history  shows that a state of turmoil
and  confrontation has been a
constant  for centuries, and that
Italians have   always  overcome their difficulties, mainly by  shrugging them off as matters concerning
“others” (i.e. the Pope, and the Emperor in the distant past, the  Political parties or the “Caste” in the
present day). This attitude of cynical sagacity may,  however, no longer be possible, given the
immediacy of  all communication and the highly
felt  apprehension for the future,
combined with the dramatic fall in the standard of living, with no immediate
prospect of  a turn-around.

1 commento:
Gentile prof. Ungaro, vorrei sapere se e dove è possibile reperire una copia del suo "Manuale del perfetto diplomatico". Cordiali saluti, Chiara Pegoraro
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