Italy is still looking for its De Gaulle
International observers are looking at
the Italian political situation with the same sense of wonder one might have
when looking at a Picasso.
On the face of it, it does not make
sense: how could political parties refuse to co-operate when Italy is at risk
of economic disaster?
The February elections have produced a
stalemate: an almost equal split between the centre-left, led by the Democratic
Party (PD), the centre-right, led by the People of Freedom (PdL) party and the
5Star Movement (M5S) of Beppe Grillo.
In normal times, the political parties
would co-operate to bring the country out of the quagmire, but these are not
normal times for Italy.
PD won the majority of the seats in the
lower house, but it does not control the senate and further support is needed.
The PD says that it does not intend to
ally with the PdL because its leader, Silvio Berlusconi has a bad reputation,
even though both parties have jointly supported the technocratic government of
Mario Monti for the past 18 months.
At the same time, M5S does not want to
enter into a coalition with the PD and such an alliance was never proposed
during the recent electoral campaigns.
Why is it so difficult to form a
government?
Understanding a Picasso painting
requires patience and imagination, to look past one's first impression and to
see the meaning behind it.
They do not have major divergences in
terms of policies, but each one is a microcosms of how they would like Italy to
be organised.
The historical background is the
bipolarism created by the presence of Berlusconi, which pushed anyone who did
not agree with his methods toward the centre-left.
As a result, the PD is not a normal
political party - it is a container of different groups with different
ideologies, priorities and interests.
It is several political parties inside
one party.
This is why the PD's current leader,
Pierluigi Bersani, comes under fire from within his own ranks when he tries to
form coalitions.
It is as if his failure would benefit
anti-Bersani factions within the PD itself.
On the other side of the spectrum is the
Berlusconi gang, for want of a more polite term.
The PdL is a party whose management is
mainly composed by former and current employees of Berlusconi's business
empire, politicians with various ideologies and members of civil society, often
from right-leaning circles.
For various reasons, PdL members of the
parliament put Berlusconi's personal interests before any other political
priorities.
How else can you explain two recent
public rallies organised by PdL deputies and senators in support of the
septuagenerian playboy and convicted fraudster?
One of them took place outside of a
tribunal where Berlusconi is under investigation.
As hundreds of companies close each day
in Italy and as youth unemployment climbs to 40 percent, the PdL seems to have
more important things to do.
For its part, the M5S exists as an
opposition movement to the current party system itself.
It is not against PD or PdL policies -
it is against what they are and how they operate.
M5S is offering an alternative system -
the possibility for average people to participate directly in the political
process based on direct representation.
Its supporters and MPs are as diverse a
bunch as those of the other parties, but they are united by their discontent
wit the status quo.
Just like the PD, it is a set of parties
within a party, of states within a state.
It wants to replace the current system
with its own model. This is why Grillo is saying that what he really needs is
100 percent of the votes.
The three main parties in Italy have
similar policies but vastly different ideas on statehood, on what the Italian
third republic should be.
The Italian scenario looks like France
at the turning point between the fourth and the fifth Republic in 1958.
At the time, France had a strong leader,
General Charles De Gaulle, who took steered it through the transition.
Italy is still looking for its De
Gaulle.
Italy now begins to look less like a
Picasso and more like the Mona Lisa - she is still smiling, but nobody knows
why.
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