Italy bids farewell to Berlusconi
Rome has ordered a day of national mourning to mark the death of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Around 20,000 supporters are expected to attend the funeral service in Milan. The 86-year-old leader of the right-wing Forza Italia party, building contractor and media mogul was one of the richest men in Italy. He was put under investigation several times for tax evasion, corruption and links to the Mafia. The obituaries in Europe's press are ambivalent.
Undue ceremony?
The Dire news agency points out:
“The proclamation of state mourning for the day of the state funeral on Wednesday, 14 June, is an unprecedented 'ceremonial' for a former prime minister like Silvio Berlusconi. Those who have held offices in institutions are entitled to a state funeral, but in Italy state mourning has only ever been declared for several popes (John XXIII, Pius XII, Paul VI and John Paul II), for two former presidents of the Republic (Giovanni Leone and Carlo Azeglio Ciampi) and for those killed in the Nāṣiriya bombing [12 November 2003, Iraq war]. Never for a former prime minister.”
Power concentrated in one person
Berlusconi had no real competition regarding his political ambitions, observes RTV Slovenija's online version:
“When he entered politics, his entire business empire merged into a single, highly efficient machine for promoting his political project; a machine that no one could match. He was also helped by the short-sightedness of his opponents, who always underestimated him. ... And because they could not offer an alternative they lost all credibility with the electorate. ... Silvio Berlusconi was the concentrate of everything that governs the society of modern democracies today: money, media influence and political power. In Italy, this combination was in the hands of a single man.”
A politician without morals
Radio NV journalist Dmytro Tusov writes on his Facebook page:
“It was Berlusconi, after all, who took an interest in an old bottle of wine while walking through the Massandra winery, which had been taken over by Russia when it occupied Crimea. ... In other words, in my view the Italian billionaire and several times prime minister had a looter's reflex. ... This is how Silvio Berlusconi will remain in my memory - a rich friend of Putin corrupted by money and power, a man with no moral brakes but with a bottle of expensive wine in his hand, which he wanted to drink with the occupier's permission.”
Infantile lack of respect
The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung draws attention to Berlusconi's image of women:
“On his broadcasters' early entertainment shows, half-naked women were paraded in front of the camera while Berlusconi unabashedly practiced his infantile lack of respect for (young) women. These shows were as incongruous with his self-portrayal as a 'family man' as the infamous 'bunga bunga parties' in the various residences of the billionaire businessman-politician. Perhaps it is this dark legacy that weighs most heavily on the 'conservative' Berlusconi era.”
His methods live on
Berlusconism is alive and kicking, Libération observes:
“Lying to the public, scorning journalists, threatening judges, always playing the victim - one might think these methods would become tiresome in the long run. But Trump, Netanyahu, Modi and Orbán continue to use them with all the more vigour. We should remember that when Berlusconi died on Monday he was still a senator, still fabulously rich and still a free man. He thought he was immortal, but he wasn't. However, even though he will be buried with great pomp and ceremony in Milan on Wednesday, unfortunately Berlusconism is not about to disappear.”
The first populist
Berlusconi focused everything on himself, thus depriving key institutions of all their power, notes La Repubblica:
“When he came to power in 1994 he weakened all the intermediate instances that characterise modern democracies. He imposed the format of a political force that was a faithful reflection of its leader; he reduced the role of parliament and vied with the president, highlighting the growing importance of sole executive power. ... He engaged in a direct confrontation with the judiciary and regarded it as a political opponent. He relied on a combination of information and entertainment in which the quality of the news lost importance; he focused all communication, political and institutional, on his own person.”
Neither evildoer nor saviour
Corriere della Sera sees Berlusconi above all as the founder of Italy's new right:
“Berlusconi was a phenomenon, the fruit of the Italian evil and at the same time its cure. ... He was not the evildoer who conquered a naïve populace with a dose of television fraud, as he has been described. But neither was he the saviour of the fatherland who freed Italy from the Cossacks of Achille Occhetto [secretary general of the left-wing PDS, which was defeated by Berlusconi in the 1994 parliamentary elections]. ... Rather, for better or worse, he was the founder of a new right and of a new type of politics with liberalist ambitions and populist traits, which set the world alight and dominated the Italian scene for twenty years, even when it was in the opposition.”
He legitimised the far right
When he brought the Alleanza Nazionale with its neo-fascist roots into government in 1994, Berlusconi broke a taboo, and this had far-reaching consequences not only for Italy, as the Irish Examiner explains:
“The AN changed its name again, to Fratelli d'Italia, and it is now the biggest party in Italian politics. Its leader, Giorgia Meloni, is currently Italy's prime minister. Thanks to Berlusconi, neo-fascism in Italy has been normalized. Berlusconi's legacy stretches far beyond Italy. He legitimized the far-right in Europe, being closely allied with Viktor Orbán in Hungary. Berlusconi was also proud of his close friendship with Putin. And of course Berlusconi paved the way for Donald Trump and the far-right in America.”
A man who knew how to win over outsiders
Berlusconi was able to reach those who felt unrepresented, writes Público:
“With his audacity, his ability to oppose the system, to tout both flaws and qualities, Berlusconi was someone who told his voters that there was no reason to be ashamed in a world where they felt lost. His constituents could be dirty, ugly, bad, even pitiable, but there was someone who was not ashamed of them. This ability to convey a sense of belonging to large sections of an electorate that feels abandoned remains a challenge for those who want democracies to be less vulnerable to the turbulence of populists.”
Politics as show business
The former Italian prime minister literally converted the political establishment into a media establishment, Naftemporiki explains:
“The Cavaliere transformed Italy into a 'media state' where - with full control over the media - there were no other parties, no political programmes. Only money and fame. With his private television stations he was at the same time the creator of a modern 'entertainment democracy'. He brought the bosses of his advertising company Publitalia and the stars of the shows of his private TV stations into the government. Silvio Berlusconi was implicated in more than 20 scandals and cases of corruption in total. And yet Italians elected him again and again: in 1994, 2001 and 2008.”
When entrepreneurs run a state
Lidové noviny sees Berlusconi as the first in a long line of similar politicians:
“After him came Netanyahu in Israel, Trump in the US, Babiš in the Czech Republic. All of them linked to business, their media outlets and the division of society. And they also have something else in common: the fear of many that they will return after elections. Netanyahu has returned twice; in our country and in the US the same fear is in the air. Why? Are these people the devil incarnate? It depends on how you look at it. When Berlusconi negotiated a deal with (Libyan leader) Gaddafi on migration, better people turned up their noses. When they look at the now destroyed Libya, they may remember it wistfully.”