The Guardian (USA)

Italy’s loss of Mario Draghi is a warning to progressiv­es across Europe – and to the EU

- Lorenzo Marsili

In a summer overshadow­ed by war in Europe, a pandemic, an energy and cost of living crisis and climate chaos, Italy has decided to follow the UK and trigger a government collapse. Mario Draghi, the internatio­nally admired former head of the European Central Bank, was never elected but was called upon in 2021 to lead a temporary government of national unity. That unity ended last week.

Other European leaders are dismayed; many Italians are incredulou­s. The Draghi cabinet achieved consistent­ly high approval ratings. And while Britain at least looks destined for a modicum of continuity as it switches Conservati­ve leaders, Italy after a year and a half of apparent political stability is now heading for a September election where hard-right parties including the post-fascist Brothers of Italy party top the polls.

The immediate culprits for the collapse of Draghi’s administra­tion are easy to identify: his coalition partners the anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement, the far-right League, led by Matteo Salvini, and Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia decided to boycott a confidence vote on a package of measures to ease the cost of living crisis.

And yet, the problem is not so much that these parties are selfish and irresponsi­ble for collapsing Draghi’s plans: of course they are. The problem is that top-down government by technocrat­s does not work in the first place and Italian progressiv­es have failed to craft a viable alternativ­e to the right. Just blaming Five Star or the League is a self-absolving narrative that risks becoming an alibi for further inaction.

Draghi’s internatio­nal prestige is no excuse for ignoring the shortfalls of his technocrat­ic approach. Italy

was always constituti­onally required to have parliament­ary elections by next spring. Ahead of that, it is only natural that political parties that had coalesced artificial­ly to form a government to relaunch the economy post-pandemic would begin to raise their voices to establish distinctiv­e identities with the electorate. This is how democratic politics functions: parties represent different worldviews and the electorate wants to be aware of the difference­s.

Draghi brought about his own downfall. Understand­ably but ultimately self-defeatingl­y, he refused to yield to pressure and hand over symbolic wins to members of his coalition. Such compromise is what politics is made of. Witness Germany’s governing coalition, which agreed to lower the price of gas to please the free market Liberals and ensure almost-free public transport to allow the Greens also to claim victory.

Brushing aside the difference­s between parties is no way to guarantee the stability of a system. It only places a lid on simmering water until the pot inevitably boils over.

Such explosions in democracie­s are called elections. But why is the prospect of an election in Italy right now so worrying?

The irresponsi­ble actions of Five Star or the League should not give Italy’s progressiv­es a free pass. They have failed to provide a realistic alternativ­e to either unelected technocrac­y or the hard-right backlash against it. If such an alternativ­e existed, the prospect of early elections would not be as threatenin­g as it seems and internatio­nal commentato­rs would not have to urge that Draghi be given six more months, however desirable that seems.

It is too often overlooked that while the Italian right is a more or less stable coalition of three parties, the progressiv­e field includes at least three liberal parties, the left-leaning Democratic party, the anti-establishm­ent Five Star, and three or four left and green parties. Relations between them are far from stable: many of the centrist parties have placed a veto on any coalition with Five Star, which has responded in kind, while several of the left parties would not join with the liberals and some even with the Democrats. This childish game of reciprocal vetoes keeps Italy’s progressiv­es out of power.

Enrico Letta, leader of the Democratic party and a former prime minister, has put in painstakin­g work to create a broad front with a realistic chance of beating the hard right in the elections. His aspiration­s have now all but gone out of the window.

The weakness of Italian progressiv­es is a chronic problem for Italy as well as for Europe. A hard-right administra­tion in Italy would weaken the EU at a crucial time of geopolitic­al confrontat­ion. It would empower Euroscepti­c leaders such as Viktor Orbán or hopefuls such as Marine Le Pen, weaken consensus on Russia and impede deeper political integratio­n with ambitious common policies on defence or energy.

And yet, again, we should refrain from using the Italian right as a cover for European inaction. Even with Draghi, previously hailed as the saviour of the euro, in power in Rome, and pro-European administra­tions in Germany and France, the EU as a whole has struggled to work together in key areas despite converging crises. EU government­s have not, for example, taken on board demands of the recent Conference on the Future of Europe, which included a removal of unanimous vote – the practice that stalls most EU decision-making – or been able to construct common defence and energy policies despite the clear and urgent need for both.

Mourning the end of an internatio­nally respected government in Italy should not make us forget these facts: Italian progressiv­es need to build a serious alternativ­e to the right and the EU needs to become a true political actor with ambitious common policies for the sake of all its citizens. A hard-right government in Italy means an even less conducive environmen­t for progress on either. But let’s not fool ourselves: none of this was happening while Draghi was in government. The silver lining is that none of this is made impossible by Draghi losing power.

Lorenzo Marsili is an Italian philosophe­r, the founder of the European Alternativ­es movement and author of Citizens of Nowhere

 ?? ?? ‘Mario Draghi’s internatio­nal prestige is no excuse for ignoring the shortfalls of his technocrat­ic approach.’ Photograph: Antonio Masiello/ Getty Images
‘Mario Draghi’s internatio­nal prestige is no excuse for ignoring the shortfalls of his technocrat­ic approach.’ Photograph: Antonio Masiello/ Getty Images

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