Former
prime minister retracts threat to make his party's MPs vote against Enrico
Letta's coalition after facing party rebellion
Italy's
grand coalition government looks certain to limp on after Silvio Berlusconi,
the former prime minister who had brought it to the brink of collapse with a
threat to withdraw his MPs, backed down at the last minute when it became clear
that rebels from his own party would allow a confidence vote to pass.
In an
unusually curt statement in the upper house of parliament, the 77-year-old –
who was convicted of tax fraud in August – said his deeply divided centre-right
Freedom People (PdL) party would vote as a block to support Enrico Letta's
coalition.
It was a
humiliating defeat for the man who has dominated the Italian political
landscape for two decades, even if, by choosing to support the government, he
will no doubt reserve the right to present himself as a responsible statesman.
"Italy
needs a government that can carry out structural and institutional reforms
which the country needs to modernise," said Berlusconi, who looked tired
and solemn during the morning's debates. "We have decided, not without
internal strife, to vote in confidence."
The
statement was a remarkable volte face from a man who on Saturday plunged the
eurozone's third largest economy into political turmoil by announcing he was
withdrawing his ministers from the coalition, nominally in protest over fiscal
policy.
That
strategy quickly proved problematic when four of the five ministers – including
his party secretary, Angelino Alfano – said they were against it. Alfano then
emerged as de facto leader of a breakaway rebel faction. In an increasingly
bizarre political dance, Letta then refused the resignations that they had
offered.
Upon
entering the senate on Wednesday, Berlusconi had indicated he was keeping an
open mind on which way to order the party to vote. Later senior PdL figures
said the party had decided to vote "in unanimity" against the
government.
But, as the
true nature of that "unanimity" became clear and 25 MPs were reported
to be ready to vote for the government, with a further 24 prepared to absent
themselves, the three-times prime minister was confronted with the prospect of
being on the losing side of a historic battle.
Berlusconi's
forced U-turn was a significant victory for Letta. Italy, a country still in
its longest postwar recession, will be spared an immediate crisis, which the
47-year-old, of the centre-left Democratic party, had earlier warned would be
"potentially fatal".
But for a
prime minister who had hoped the vote could just possibly open the way to a new
majority with more moderates and fewer hawkish Berlusconi allies, it was
arguably a hollow victory. For almost its entire five-month lifetime, the
coalition has jumped from crisis to crisis, and been fraught with tensions,
spats and profound ideological differences.
Christopher
Duggan, professor of Italian history at the University of Reading, said:
"Berlusconi's humiliating U-turn, in the face of the impending defection
of some two dozen of his party's senators, is an enormous boost to the prime
minister, Enrico Letta, and to his government. It leaves Berlusconi greatly
weakened, and with the judicial noose tightening around him, his political star
now looks to be firmly waning. However, the increasingly fraught and unstable
character of the party political landscape in Italy leaves the government
facing some difficult times ahead if it is to pass much-needed reforms."
Earlier on
Wednesday, Letta urged senators to search their consciences and support his
government in a make-or-break confidence vote. In a speech, he said it was up
to MPs from all sides of the spectrum to save the country from government
collapse.
"Italy
is running a risk that is potentially fatal, without remedy," he said.
"Thwarting this risk, to seize or not seize the moment, depends on the
choices we will make in this chamber. It depends on a yes or a no."
In the most
important speech of his career, Letta urged senators to accept that Italy's
government could not be held hostage by Berlusconi's increasingly pressing
legal woes. Because of his conviction, the billionaire media magnate faces
imminent expulsion from the Senate.
In a direct
rebuke to Berlusconi, Letta said the interests of one person and those of an
entire nation "neither could nor can overlap". In a democratic state,
he added, "sentences are respected and enforced".
Berlusconi
has to choose by the middle of this month whether to serve his sentence under
house arrest or in community services. Italians, said Letta, were sick and
tired of "blood and theatrics" and of "politicians who butcher
each other and then change nothing".
As Italy
showed signs of recovering economically, the country needed a government that
focused on its pressing socioeconomic problems, which include record youth
unemployment and a public debt of over €2tn (£1.7tn).
Plunging it
back into political limbo would delay efforts to help struggling businesses,
embarrass Italy in Europe, and hit hardest ordinary families who have suffered
the most during the economic downturn, he said.
In a final
appeal that referred obliquely to Berlusconi, he asked senators for courage and
confidence to avoid being hit by "shameful regret". He said it would
be "a confidence [vote] that is not against anyone; a confidence [vote]
that is for Italy".
If the
government was able to continue, he said, it would exercise tight control over
public finances and avoid the deficit running over 3%. If it was struck down
and a new election had to be held, he said, Italy ran a risk of fresh
ungovernability, with a deadlocked parliament likely due to an electoral law
that Letta says is a reform priority.
The prime
minister's speech began by quoting Luigi Einaudi, a former Italian president.
"In the lives of nations, the mistake of not knowing how to seize the
fleeting moment is irreparable," he said.
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goldenageofgaia.com, Steve Beckow, An Hour with an Angel, September 30, 2013, with Archangel Michael
SB: All right. Maybe I can squeeze in one or two questions just before we go.
At this moment it seems as if in the American political spectrum the same blind opposition to President Obama is still apparent. When and how will the governments of the world emerge as uncorrupted institutions, given that there will now be a wholesale move towards new administrations? I don’t mean a toppling of administrations, but a reformation throughout the world.
AAM: The political landscape, not only in the United States but in many places, is going to shift rather dramatically in the coming year, and particularly within the next several months. Do not be overly concerned about opposition to Obama. What it is doing is bringing to the forefront — and making it very public — those who do not wish this energy [Obama] to be in a leadership position. That is not going to change. It will come to the forefront and the light will win.
SB: Oh, that’s very reassuring.
AAM: We are very present in the White House.
SB: Oh! Very good! Okay. I think I recall you mentioning Medicare in Canada. Canada has a wonderful system of universal medicare. When will the United States enjoy the same quality of medicare? Or other nations, for that matter.
AAM: You see, this is one of the fundamental rights, and your United Nations has just begun to peek at this. All of your — yes, all — of your medical systems have been based on false grids that you are eligible for disease. Many, many industries have grown up around this belief system.
Now, we would not dismantle this in a day, because the displacement would be very large, but you have already begun to see the shift to wellness, to healing centers, to alternative methods of energy healing. And with the arrival of your star brothers and sisters this will become even more so.
So not only universal medical care, but universal healthcare and the right to wellness is going to become the simple stand-alone fact over the next year to two years. Oh, and it will happen much more quickly in the United States.
SB: Oh, that’s good to hear. So many people are bankrupted by a sudden illness. And it never should be that way.
AAM: It is an atrocity that one may suffer and die because one does not have adequate money. That is absurd.
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