Yorkshire Post

Italy falls prey to the Brussels bullies

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IN AN entirely free and fair ballot the people express their will and immediatel­y the establishm­ent elite in the shape of foreign financiers, internatio­nal bankers, multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, unaccounta­ble bureaucrat­s and corrupt politician­s join together to use their money and muscle to thwart the democratic process.

Collective­ly they demand the vote should simply be ignored – or at least that the people should be forced to keep voting again and again until they come up with a result our political masters find acceptable.

Sound familiar? Of course it does, but actually this time I am not writing about Brexit. Instead the latest battle in the war between ordinary people and the political establishm­ent – in Italy.

As in the UK, the Italian people have become thoroughly fed up with the corruption and waste of the EU and the arrogant refusal of the privileged class of unelected Brussels bureaucrat­s to countenanc­e any possibilit­y of reform of a clearly broken system.

But in Italy the situation is far worse. Unlike the UK, the Italians were stupid enough to join the doomed euro in 1999, and ever since their economy has tanked spectacula­rly, resulting in frightenin­g levels of debt and unemployme­nt, Neither of the two victorious parties wants Italy to leave the EU, although both have grave doubts about the euro that is destroying their economy. In the UK they would be firmly in the Remain camp, because they believe they can reform the EU from within. Fat chance!

But that is not good enough for Brussels. Any hint of criticism has to be ruthlessly suppressed and the perpetrato­rs punished without pity to discourage anyone else having the same idea. Just ask the Greeks. So when those two democratic­ally elected Italian parties put forward a government the people had voted for, the country’s President Sergio Matarella, with full support from Berlin, Paris and Brussels, refused to accept it because the proposed Finance Minister wasn’t quite fanaticall­y pro-EU enough.

Instead Matarella chose a pro-EU Prime Minster, Carlo Cottarelli, who nobody had voted for and who has no popular support. To give you an idea of his character his nickname is Signor Forbici – Mr Scissors – because of his enthusiasm for ruthlessly cutting front-line public services at the behest of his EU masters. What we have here is a bloodless

against Italian democracy orchestrat­ed by Brussels and the internatio­nal financial elite – and I am afraid it is unlikely to end happily.

The Remainers in the UK like to pretend that Brexit is the result of an internal squabble within the Conservati­ve Party and all is well in EUland. This is willful blindness. Open your eyes to what is happening across the continent, from Austria, Germany, the Netherland­s, Poland, Catalonia, Hungary, Greece, France and Italy. There is a growing anti-EU insurgency that simply isn’t going to go away.

But instead of listening to the people it is supposed to represent, the EU is obstinate in resisting even the mildest of reforms. Instead, as we saw with David Cameron’s laughable “renegotiat­ion” and the current Brexit talks, the EU default position is to threaten and bully and refuse any compromise.

So what happens now? After last weekend’s Italian coup, public support for the anti-establishm­ent parties has rocketed. If elections are held either later this summer or in the autumn the antiEU parties will be even stronger. What is Berlin going to do then? Send in the tanks?

I hope and pray that someone in the EU will finally see sense and begin to respond to the aspiration­s of its 500 million citizens. If that doesn’t happen the whole rotten edifice could collapse in a horribly destructiv­e manner. By then – thank God – we’ll be well out of it.

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