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Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election (karma: 4)  en>fr fr>en
By TexanForever Comments: 21182, member since Thu Jun 10, 2004
On Mon Feb 25, 2013 05:56 PM
Berlu's back in the saddle again. :P

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Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election

By Jason Horowitz, Monday, February 25, 3:40 PM


ROME — Silvio Berlusconi, the three-time Italian prime minister, billionaire playboy and perpetual criminal defendant, who was all but counted out of Italian political life when a debt crisis forced his resignation in 2011, shocked the country Monday by shooting back into a position of influence.

Even by the chaotic standards of Italian politics, the resurgence of Berlusconi’s People of Liberty party, which seems to be in contention to win the most seats in the Italian Senate, along with the astonishingly strong showing of a naysaying protest party led by Beppe Grillo, a seething ex-comedian opposed to the euro, has cast the Italian government into confusion.

There was no clear victor in Sunday and Monday’s elections. There were, however, losers. The left-leaning Democratic Party, led by Pier Luigi Bersani, a former industry minister, appeared likely to win the lower House of Parliament but fell far short of expectations. On Monday night, as Bersani was left hoping to have enough support to try to form a coalition government, nervous murmuring imbued the party’s victory festivities, and an empty stage draped with a sign reading “A Just Italy” was surrounded by pacing officials.

Bersani, 61, is weighed down with far-left partners including Nichi Vendola, a gay, ex-communist southern governor that the Italian press once dubbed “the white Obama.” Vendola once assessed himself to The Post as “beloved.” He is less cherished by the potential partners Bersani needs to form a coalition, setting the stage for yet another collapse-prone Italian government.

“We have a problem of governability,” said the party’s spokesman, Roberto Seghetti.

The smallest electorate since World War II sent a clear message of dissatisfaction to the country’s caretaker prime minister, Mario Monti, who was advised by David Axelrod. An international darling for his technical government’s emphasis on responsibility, personal austerity but also European spending throughout the continent’s bleak financial crisis, Monti proved a political flop at home and won less than 10 percent of the vote, dashing his hopes to finish a mission that counted President Obama among its supporters.

“This is a very important election,” said Caitlin Hayden, an Obama administration spokeswoman. “We look forward to working closely with Italy’s next government and its leaders when it is formed.”

When that would happen was far from clear. Throughout Italy, there was fear that Tuesday morning’s markets would once again view Italy as unstable, prompting the sort of debt crisis that forced Berlusconi from power in November 2011.

Only weeks ago, critics of Berlusconi were sure that the onetime cruise ship singer was gone from national politics for good. Berlusconi, whose last public appearances before the election included a favorable comparison between the Sicilian mafia and the Italian judicial system, had promised to forgive the building of illegal houses and personally pay about 4 billion euros worth of property taxes for Italian citizens. He also expertly benefited from the fragmentation of the Italian political universe. Where once he had seemed a relic, he is again relevant.

“He’s the best campaigner,” said Roberto D’Alimonte, professor of political science at the Luiss university, who added that the “winner” of the elections, however, was Grillo’s raging Five Star Movement, which garnered about a quarter of the vote. “We have never seen anything like it in Europe,” he said of Grillo’s campaign.

The 64-year-old Grillo, who has sapped the votes of the Italian left, transformed himself from theoretical funnyman to public scourge of Italy’s corrupt political class in 2007, when he began holding V-Day protests (short for an Italian expletive). Hundreds of thousands of supporters have turned out in recent weeks to hear Grillo, who has put a Guy Fawkes mask on his Tsunami Tour’s campaign camper, has the most-read blog in Italy and exhausts himself screaming “thieves!” and bemoaning the country’s myriad woes.

What worries many of Italy’s more sober politicians and analysts is that the protest leader does not seem to be in favor of much. A conviction for vehicular manslaughter in an accident that killed three people means that Grillo himself cannot serve in parliament, and his candidates have no governing experience, having won by railing against tax collectors, vaccines, citizenship for children born to Italy’s legal immigrants and the euro.

Outside a voting station on Via Tevere, Enrico Beccarini, 61, said he was disappointed by a Monti campaign that amounted to “putting up posters,” and the chilly economist trying to warm his image by adopting a dog named Empathy. He voted for Grillo’s party because “it’s a strong protest vote,” he said.

Giancarlo Pagotto, a retired banker, walked out minutes later and said he had cast his ballot for Berlusconi. “At this moment, he seems to me the only acceptable choice,” he said with a shrug. “I’m anti-communist so I can’t vote Bersani, Grillo is leading a good rebellion but we have no idea what he’s for, and Monti disappointed me.”

As for Berlusconi’s pledge to personally pay for the country’s real estate tax, Pagotto said, “you say a lot of things in an electoral campaign. My hope is that he wins and then steps aside for someone else in his party and becomes economy minister. He’s a great entrepreneur.”

www.washingtonpost.com . . .


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5 Replies to Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election

re: Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election en>fr fr>en
By SevenSeventeen Comments: 15240, member since Tue Apr 22, 2003
On Mon Feb 25, 2013 06:34 PM
"astonishingly strong showing of a naysaying protest party led by Beppe Grillo

Grillo’s raging Five Star Movement, which garnered about a quarter of the vote. “We have never seen anything like it in Europe"


Oh yes you have. In the 1930's - remember?? This guy Grillo is an assclown, a muzzie agent of influence and an old fashioned 30's fascist.

Watch this guy. Like Golden Shower in Greece he is most likely the future of Eurarabia.
re: Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election (karma: 1)  en>fr fr>en
By Lord_Haw_Haw Comments: 12840, member since Sun Mar 07, 2010
On Mon Feb 25, 2013 07:34 PM
Grillo is an agent of the present un-elected PM and Axelrod, the advisor, to remove votes from those that may topple them

The place is run by un-elected bureacrats who shouldn't be running the show. The fact they are appointed to run the nation for the EU shows what a scam and criminal group the EU is

Berlusconi is a cunt, but at least he was elected
re: Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election en>fr fr>en
By lookanlearn Comments: 10565, member since Sun Jun 10, 2007
On Mon Feb 25, 2013 10:25 PM
I would piss a whole lot better is someone would shoot him in the head.
re: Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election (karma: 2)  en>fr fr>en
By mikgof Comments: 12009, member since Tue Feb 17, 2004
On Mon Feb 25, 2013 11:42 PM
Un-fucking-believable. Berlusconi more than anyone else is responsible Italy's economic woes. He's as bent as a nine bob note, yet instead of stringing him up, they're actually going to vote for him.
re: Berlusconi revives political career in chaotic Italian election (karma: 3)  en>fr fr>en
By Nappybonesapart Comments: 18601, member since Fri Aug 27, 2004
On Tue Feb 26, 2013 09:43 AM
only italia could the politics result in 2 clowns facing off against each other Grillo vs the other Berlu

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