October 18, 2018 Topic: Security Region: Europe Tags: ItalyPoliticsEuropean UnionBureaucratsGiuseppe Conte
The view from Brussels is one of
concern and exasperation.
At one point in the not-so-distant
past, Italy was known as the “sick man of Europe.” The country’s economy was
racking up piles of unsustainable debt due to high public spending; youth
unemployment, particularly in Italy’s south, reached astronomically
high levels ; and
Italian politicians were so ineffectual and incompetent that it made the U.S.
Congress look like a well-oiled machine. Many Italians looked at the
traditional political parties and saw a group of out-of-touch elites who
couldn’t even keep their government from collapsing, let alone make their lives
more bearable.
That, however, was the Italy of
yesterday. The Italy of today, with the populist coalition government enjoying public approval ratings that past governments could
only dream of, is bold, confident and increasingly strident. Prime Minister
Giuseppe Conte may be a law professor who boasts a calm demeanor on the
outside, but the two deputy prime ministers who really run the show are
rabble-rousers and proud nationalists who despise being lectured to by other
Europeans. Matteo Salvini and Luigi Di Maio, the respective party leaders of
the League and the Five Star Movement (5SM), are turning Italy from the “sick
man of Europe” to the “troublemaker of Europe”—the black sheep of the European
family.
While Di Maio is less of a media
darling than the eccentric Salvini, both men are responsible for Italy’s
transformation into a populist bulwark in the European Union. They aren’t
afraid to hit their European colleagues in the teeth; indeed, for many Italian
voters, this is a big part of their appeal. When France’s Emmanuel Macron, the
epitome of the European political establishment, criticized Rome for its cynical
immigration policy, Di Maio hit back in a very undiplomatic way. “Let them [the
French] open their ports and we will transfer a few of the people to France,”
the deputy premier said . Otherwise, it would be wise for Paris to shut its
mouth and stop being hypocritical.
Ditto Salvini makes Di Maio look like
a choir boy in comparison. The interior minister has taken special pleasure in
competing with Macron for the future of Europe, partnering with Hungary’s
Viktor Orbán in a continent-wide campaign against pro-EU parties in next
spring’s elections for control of the European Parliament. No slight goes
unpunished; last week, Salvini admonished the EU’s economic affairs
commissioner for comparing the current Italian government to a less extreme
version of Benito Mussolini’s Fascists. As the Italian firebrand put it , “He should wash his mouth out before insulting
Italy.”
The view from Brussels is one of
concern and exasperation. In the past, the Italians would put up a fight during
EU summits, but at the end of the meetings, they would at least cooperate and
sign up to the conclusions on the table. For the League-5SM coalition in Rome,
however, cooperation isn’t in its nature. Italy’s populists have no problem
using its veto power to block additional sanctions on Moscow, as they did last week
when the EU tried to put a Crimean politician on the continent’s blacklist. In
late June, Prime Minister Conte held up the summit proceedings until his colleagues agreed to
settle on a migration policy that would lessen the burden on Italy’s shoulders.
And if the Europeans don’t meet their commitments on the migration issue,
Salvini will use his power to forbid any further docking of migrant ships into
Italian ports. What human-rights organizations decry as “ pure
cruelty ,” Rome
lauds as a necessary measure to force Brussels into action.
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