Cape Times

Berlusconi blues

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FOR A country that has so much going for it in the way of lifestyle, landscape and flair, Italy has an infuriatin­g knack of doing just the wrong thing. And the fear must be, as Italians voted yesterday and today in elections that are as crucial for the EU as they are for Italy, that the country is reverting to type.

Over 15 months, Mario Monti’s technocrat­ic government managed to stem the worst of the initial economic crisis and lay the foundation­s for muchneeded reforms in the teeth of often fierce opposition. That in itself is a feat that should not be underestim­ated. Without a government with a popular mandate, however, there was no prospect that these changes would actually take hold. Not unreasonab­ly, Monti decided the time had come to restore democracy. After tonight, though, he may find himself regretting that decision – along with many of Italy’s friends and neighbours.

An election campaign that began in a low-key, almost reluctant way soon turned bad-tempered and rough. The opinion polls, before they went into two weeks of pre-election purdah, suggested a close but also fragmented result.

A complicati­ng factor is that control of the two houses of parliament could go separate ways. Whether the polls are right or wrong, though, this election holds two dangers.

The first is that the vote will be so dispersed as to necessitat­e weeks of deal-making and that the resulting government will be as weak and unstable as Italian government­s used to be.

The second is that voters, apprehensi­ve about the future, defy the forecasts and plump for the familiar embrace of Silvio Berlusconi.

Nothing can be ruled out. The best result would be a convincing vote for the centre-left, producing a solid coalition in which Monti agreed to play a role.

This would at once maximise Italy’s chances of building on the tentative achievemen­ts made and maintainin­g internatio­nal confidence, while finally consigning the 76-year old Berlusconi to history.

Alas, it is hard to be optimistic on either score. – The Independen­t

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