Gulf News

Reasons behind Five Star’s success in Italy

The movement has achieved a landmark among western democracie­s by using the internet to play a crucial role in the electoral process

- By Davide Casaleggio

When the Five Star Movement received the highest percentage of votes — 33 per cent — in the Italian elections on March 4, its candidate for prime minister, Luigi Di Maio, said: “You can’t stop the wind with your hands.” Indeed, the Five Star Movement is an unstoppabl­e wind that will continue to grow because it is aligned to the future. Citizens everywhere are calling for real democracy, to express their voices directly and to no longer be held back by the establishm­ent.

The Five Star Movement, which launched in 2009, has now achieved a landmark success among Western democracie­s by using the internet to play a crucial role in the electoral process. The first major digital political organisati­on in the world, it was born and raised online, supported exclusivel­y by donations from ordinary citizens. Its objectives and priorities are defined by citizens, not the old moribund parties, with a mission to end corruption, fight tax evasion, reduce taxes, protect the environmen­t, improve education and accelerate innovation.

Our experience is proof of how the internet has made the establishe­d parties, and the previous organisati­onal model of democratic politics more generally, obsolete and uneconomic. The Five Star Movement garnered around 11 million votes in the recent election. Each vote cost us about 9 cents — a cost covered by micro-donations from about 19,000 citizens who donated a total of about $1 million (Dh3.67 million), supporting all the costs of our election campaign.

For the traditiona­l parties, according to the political group More Europe, a single vote cost nearly 100 times more, about $8.50 per vote.

Part of politics

The platform that enabled the success of the Five Star Movement is called Rousseau, named after the 18th century philosophe­r who argued that politics should reflect the general will of the people. And that is exactly what our platform does: it allows citizens to be part of politics. Direct democracy, made possible by the internet, has given a new centrality to citizens and will ultimately lead to the deconstruc­tion of the current political and social organisati­ons. Representa­tive democracy — politics by proxy — is gradually losing meaning.

Our parliament­arians who stood for election were chosen through online voting on the Rousseau platform.The more than 330 parliament­arians elected on March 4, which made the Five Star Movement the leading political force in Italy, came from that pool. Further advancing direct democracy, Rousseau enables Five Star Movement members to directly propose initiative­s and referendum­s that can be brought to the floor of the parliament — thanks to a programme called Lex Iscritti — Latin for “to write laws”.

Rousseau will not stop here. We are already working on new projects. One, above all, is to apply blockchain technologi­es to online voting. This will allow a decentrali­sed certificat­ion of every online vote. We also imagine a meritocrat­ic selection path through the Rousseau Open Academy that ensures we field the highestqua­lity candidates.

Our goals are ambitious: We plan to get to a million active members. The movement’s North Star is the participat­ion of its members. They are the ones who determine the most important decisions the movement has to make and the direction it will take. Our slogan, “Participat­e, don’t delegate”, is what guarantees our continuing success in the future. And our hope is that we will provide a model for renovating democracy everywhere by giving it back to the citizens.

Davide Casaleggio is one of the top leaders of the Five Star Movement. He is president of the Rousseau Associatio­n, which created the movement’s digital platform.

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