<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=569> 
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=569


 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=569> Berlusconi Is Back


by Srdja Trifkovic

 Srdja Trifkovic 
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/strifkovic.thumbnail.jpg> 
Silvio Berlusconi is back in power, to the chagrin of his numerous detractors 
and somewhat understated joy of his supporters. The 71-year-old media tycoon, 
who is assuming the premier’s post for the third time, said his full cabinet 
would take shape within a week, to include EU justice commissioner Franco 
Frattini as foreign minister, longtime aide Gianni Letta as deputy prime 
minister, as well as at least four women. But the success of Berlusconi’s 
center-right coalition would not have been possible without the support of his 
often turbulent allies, the  <http://www.leganord.org/elezioni/2008> Northern 
League, which  <http://www.agi.it/italy/news/200804142016-pol-ren0091-art.html> 
doubled its vote to over 8 percent nationally and is certain to have several 
ministers in the new government.

“Now we need reforms,” Umberto Bossi, the party’s famously outspoken leader, 
declared the day after the vote. The first measure the party will press for is 
“fiscal federalism”, which would allow regions greater control over tax 
revenues. He will also demand rigorous enforcement of immigration laws, greater 
protection for Italy’s manufacturing industries, slower pace of European 
integration, and above all the curbing of the waste, inefficiency and 
corruption of the political establishment in the capital, “Robber Rome.”

For over a decade Bossi has been an often uneasy partner with Mr. Berlusconi 
and his other major ally,  <http://www.alleanzanazionale.it/> Alleanza 
Nazionale (AN) led by Gianfranco Fini. The AN draws much of its support from 
the south, and—being the direct heir to the old  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Social_Movement#Gianfranco_Fini.E2.80.99s_leadership_.281987.E2.80.931989.3B_1990.E2.80.931995.29_and_MSI.E2.80.99s_dissolution>
 Social Movement—strongly supports Italy’s national unity. Bossi brought down 
Berlusconi’s first administration in 1994, after less than a year in power, and 
repeatedly threatened to do so again after Berlusconi became prime minister for 
the second time in 2001.

The League asserts that it is no longer a secessionist party, however, and now 
it limits its demands to political and fiscal autonomy for the putative 
northern region of  
<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Padania-Italia.png> “Padania.” Over 
the past decade the League has evolved into a more durable and astute political 
force than it had been in the 1990s, and Bossi’s relationship with Berlusconi 
is said to be closer than ever before. “He’s not a hostage. He’s a friend,” the 
League leader said of the prime minister-elect. For his part Berlusconi pledged 
to split the country into two distinct fiscal entities: describing federalism 
as “modern,” he said he would be defending a “great principle of democracy and 
liberty.”

The new coalition is likely to be much tougher on illegal immigration and law 
and order issues than its leftist predecessors. On Tuesday  
<http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Politics/?id=1.0.2078770221> Berlusconi 
said that Italy would start rounding up illegal immigrants: “One of the first 
things to do is to close the frontiers and set up more camps to identify 
foreign citizens who don’t have jobs and are forced into a life of crime.” His 
pledge to “increase neighbourhood police forces who would place themselves 
between the people of Italy and the army of evil” predictably outraged the Left.

In his previous mandate Berlusconi was considered insufficiently tough on 
illegals because of his links with the business community keen on cheap labor, 
but this time the League is determined to keep him on the straight and narrow. 
Its record is promising. Bossi caused a storm in 2003 when a newspaper quoted 
him as saying that immigrants arriving in Italy by boat should be “blown out of 
the water.” His aide Roberto Calderoli was forced to resign from the cabinet in 
2006 after revealing a T-shirt on TV emblazoned with a cartoon of the Muhammad, 
originally published in Denmark, that triggered worldwide protests among 
Muslims.

With Berlusconi’s victory it is becoming more likely that Italy, a major path 
of entry for North African Muslims moving into Europe, will finally begin to 
tackle the problem of illegal immigration seriously. As Oriana Falacci noted 
shortly before her death two years ago, the country’s tolerance level was 
already surpassed fifteen or twenty years ago, “when the Left let the Muslims 
disembark on our coasts by the thousands.” In this year’s campaign, one of the 
League’s election posters displayed a drawing of an American Indian in a 
feathered headdress, accompanied by the slogan: “They suffered immigration: Now 
they live in reserves.”

For the first time since before the First World War Italy will have a national 
assembly neatly divided between two main groups, with one of them commanding a 
clear majority. Italy needs such stability and, his health allowing, Berlusconi 
may well keep his promise of staying in power for the next five years. The 
question is whether he has the will and ideas to put those five years to a good 
use, not just for himself and his friends—of that ability nobody should have 
any doubt—but for Italy and Europe.


Dr. S. Trifkovic, Foreign Affairs Editor
CHRONICLES: A Magazine of American Culture
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?cat=4 
www.trifkovic.mysite.com 

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