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Italian elections

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April 15th, 2008

No future for radical Italian left?

Posted by: Iain Rogers

Fausto Bertinotti gestures in Italy’s lower house of parliament

The Rainbow Left alliance, which includes remnants of Italy’s once-mighty communist party, somewhat surprisingly decided to hold what was meant to be its election night celebration at Rome’s Hard Rock café.

An apt choice for the DJ might have been “God Save The Queen” by the Sex Pistols, with its refrain of “There’s no future, no future, no future for you”.

The alliance failed to win seats in either house of parliament, a performance which provoked the headline “It’s a Waterloo” in the moderate daily Il Riformista and prompted the resignation of alliance leader Fausto Bertinotti, speaker of the lower house during the last parliament.

It appears Silvio Berlusconi has won his long-term battle against the political opponents he lambasts as communist liars and accuses of eating children and priests.

Leading the hand-wringing, communist daily Il Manifesto ran the headline “Extra-parliamentary Left” and said the Rainbow Left had paid a very high price for not giving its supporters what they wanted during two years in the coalition government of former Prime Minister Romano Prodi.

Gennaro Migliore, a hard left lawmaker, told L’Unita (the newspaper founded by leading Italian communist Antonio Gramsci in 1924) that the election debacle constituted a “Ground Zero”.

Il Manifesto columnist Valentino Parlato said the Left had failed to convince Italians worried about job security, who had instead voted in droves for Berlusconi and his anti-immigrant and protectionist Northern League allies.

The disastrous showing by the radical left was the biggest surprise of election night, according to Gian Enrico Rusconi, a political scientist at Turin University.Bertinotti in happier times

“We have seen a shift to the right in Italian society and the incredible thing is that the so-called radical left, the closest to the communist tradition in our country, is not even in parliament,” he told Reuters. “I don’t believe there is a future for them because this setback is very, very serious.”

April 11th, 2008

Berlusconi, allies beef up rhetoric on illegal immigration

Posted by: Iain Rogers

Italian centre-right leader Silvio Berlusconi speaks during an election rally next to the Colosseum in Rome April 10, 2008

At a campaign rally next to the Colosseum in Rome on Thursday evening, Silvio Berlusconi and his allies spoke out against illegal immigration and vowed to make stamping it out a priority if elected.
At times the rhetoric was vehement — and then drew some of the loudest cheers of the night.
Their hardline stance may be partly because they fear losing votes to Franceso Storace’s right-wing party “La Destra” (The Right). The party’s candidate for prime minister, the feisty Daniela Santanche, this week had a high-profile clash with Berlusconi on women’s issues.
Alfredo Antoniozzi, running for president of the province of Rome, kicked things off at Thursday’s rally, complaining that so-called “clandestini” were “infesting” Italy’s streets. Rome mayor candidate Gianni Alemanno pledged to expel 20,000 illegal immigrants immediately on taking office: “We want to feel like masters in our own home! We want to liberate Rome from this degradation!”
Alemanno belongs to the Alleanza Nazionale party, which traces its roots to Italian fascism. (The grandaughter of fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, Alessandra Mussolini, appeared on stage in the latter part of the rally.)
Alleanza leader Gianfranco Fini promised that if Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PDL) party wins the election, the law would be changed to make sure that expulsions of illegal immigrants were actually carried out.
Rules on immigration are enshrined in a law that bears Fini’s name and that of Umberto Bossi, the leader of the anti-immigrant Northern League that is also allied to Berlusconi.
(Reuters colleague Gilles Castonguay wrote a great blog about the Northern League’s anti-immigrant campaign last week.)

Would-be immigrants sit in a temporary holding camp of the southern Italian island of Lampedusa June 22, 2007

When Berlusconi finally took to the stage, after a stirring rendition of the Italian national anthem, he accused his centre-left rivals of opening Italy’s borders and allowing in large numbers of illegal immigrants. This had gravely compromised the safety of Italy’s streets and could not be tolerated any longer, he said.
One of the biggest laughs of the evening came when Berlusconi suggested his centre-left rival Walter Veltroni emigrate to Africa.

April 9th, 2008

Berlusconi media assets give him iconic status-study

Posted by: Iain Rogers

A study by two Italian psychology professors I unearthed on the Internet throws light on the effect Silvio Berlusconi’s influence over the nation’s media can have on the minds of ordinary Italians.

It appears to suggest that the former prime minister’s image is deeply engrained in the psyche of Italians and this may give him an electoral advantage.

Through his Fininvest holding company, the former prime minister controls Italy’s biggest private broadcaster as well as publishing and film assets. His brother owns the national daily Il Giornale and his wife funds the newspaper Il Foglio.

The psychological study, by University of Padua professor Sara Mondini and University of Trieste professor Carlo Semenza and published in 2004, examines the case of a 66-year-old housewife who had been suffering from a degenerative brain disease for three years.

She could barely recognise the face of her husband and two children and consistently failed to recognise relatives and friends. Shown pictures of 15 famous people, including Hitler, Mussolini and Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, the woman recognised only one: Silvio Berlusconi. Berlusconi in recent photo
She was unable to provide any information about the 14 other famous people but in the case of Berlusconi she could say he was a very rich man, a television owner and a politician.

“It may be important to underline the fact that testing occurred at around the time of the 2001 Italian general election when media coverage of Berlusconi was at its peak,” write Mondini and Semenza.

The woman was still able to recognise him six months later, despite further significant deterioration of her cognitive skills. By then, she was unable to recognize pictures of her own daughter and son, her cousins and neighbours and had serious problems in recognizing them in person.

Mondini and Semenza conclude that repeated exposure to Berlusconi may have turned his face into a non-living, but very well recognisable, icon. This is supported by the fact that during the latter stages of the study, the woman was able to recognise pictures of Jesus Christ on the cross.

“This telling effect of Berlusconi’s pervasive propaganda constitutes an unprecedented case in the neuropsychological literature,” the authors write.

April 7th, 2008

Near German slayings, expats doubt vote will end mafia threat

Posted by: Iain Rogers

The issue of tackling organised crime has not been especially prominent in the Italian election campaign but to ex-pat Italian residents of Duisburg in north-western Germany, it's an emotive topic. The industrial city in the Ruhr valley made international headlines last summer when six Italians were gunned down outside a pizzeria in an apparent feud between members of the Calabrian mafia, the 'Ndrangheta.

On a recent trip to Duisburg, Reuters correspondent Iain Rogers visited the sight of the shootings.

duisbergscene.jpg

A stone's throw from the central station on the ground floor of an ugly tower block, the restaurant is now an empty shell. It's dark inside and eerily quiet. The sign above the door set back from the busy road has been ripped down, wires hang from the ceiling and dust-covered chairs are strewn across the floor. Old menus and photographs of Italian dishes litter the area near the entrance. A couple of hundred metres down the road, Italian-born Renato Venier runs an ice cream cafe.

Venier, 41, hails from the north-eastern Italian town of Codroipo in the Friuli-Venezia Guilia region and has lived in Germany for 28 years. Sitting at a corner table, he reflects that organised crime is a big problem in Germany, which he blames on an influx of southern Italians.

He's voting for Silvio Berlusconi in the election but he doesn't believe either the conservative former prime minister or his rival on the left, Walter Veltroni, has what it takes to tackle organised crime.

"It operates above politics and the rule of law. There is too much money and power involved," he says.

Both main candidates broached the mafia issue at the weekend, after 12 convicted mobsters were released from prison in Sicily because of a technicality ahead of an appeal. Berlusconi declared his political group "incompatible" with organised crime, while Veltroni spoke out against the mafia and an Italian justice system plagued by delays.

In Duisburg, Venier is unconvinced.

"As long as the same people are running the country there'll never be a solution," he says. "They don't want to solve it as it suits them the way things are."