Escobar: Giorgia (Meloni) On Our Mind
Authored by Pepe Escobar,
Grab the Negronis and the Aperol Spritz; itâs show time...
Itâs tempting to interpret the Italian electoral results this past Sunday as voters merrily hurling a bowl of lush papardelle with wild boar ragu over the collective bland faces of the toxic unelected Euro-oligarchy sitting in Brussels.
Well, itâs complicated.
Italyâs electoral system is all about coalitions. The center-right Meloni-Berlusconi-Salvini troika is bound to amass a substantial majority in both the Parliamentâs Lower House and the Senate. Giorgia Meloni leads Fratelli dâItalia (âBrothers of Italyâ). The notorious Silvio âBunga Bungaâ Berlusconi leads Forza Italia. And Matteo Salvini leads La Lega.
The established clichĂ© across Italyâs cafes is that Giorgia becoming Prime Minister was a shoo-in: after all sheâs âblonde, blue eyes, petite, sprightly and endearingâ. And an expert communicator to boot. Quite the opposite of Goldman Sachs partner and former uber-ECB enforcer Mario Draghi, who looks like one of those bloodied emperors of Romeâs decadence. During his Prime Ministerial reign, he was widely derided â apart from woke/finance circles â as the leader of âDraghistanâ.
On the financial front that otherworldly entity, the Goddess of the Market, the post-truth equivalent of the Delphi Oracle, bets that PM Giorgia will insist on the same old strategy: debt-funded fiscal stimulus, which will turn into a blowout in Italian debt (already huge, at 150% of GDP). All that plus a further collapse of the euro.
So the big question now is whoâs going to be Italyâs new Finance Minister. Giorgiaâs party has no one with the requisite competence for it. So the preferred candidate shall be âapprovedâ by the usual suspects as a sort of enforcer of âDraghistan liteâ. Draghi, by the way, already said heâs âready to collaborateâ.
Marvels of gastronomy apart, life in the EUâs third largest economy is a drag. Long-term growth prospects are like a mirage in the Sahara. Italy is extremely vulnerable when it comes to the financial markets. So a bond market a-go-go selloff in the horizon is practically a given.
In case of a â nearly inevitable â financial catfight cage match between Team Giorgia and Christine âlook at my new Hermes scarfâ Lagarde at the ECB, the European Central Bank will âforgetâ to buy Italian bonds and then, Auguri! Welcome to a new round of EU sovereign debt crisis.
On the campaign trail, sprightly Giorgia incessantly pledged to keep the massive debt under control. That was coupled with the requisite message to placate the woke crypto-âLeftâ and its neoliberal banking owners: we support NATO and sending weapons to Ukraine. In fact everyone â from Giorgia to Salvini â supports the weaponizing, having signed a letter during the previous legislature, in effect until the end of 2022.
Deconstructing a âsemi-fascistâ
The Atlanticist woke/neoliberal sphere, predictably, is fuming with the advent of âpost-fascistâ Italy: oh, these people always voting the wrong way⊠The discombobulated think tank crowd is pointing to the latest in a cycle of populist waves in Italy; they donât even know what âpopulistâ means. But they canât be too hysterical because Giorgia, after all, is a product of the Aspen Institute.
Giorgia is a complex case. She is essentially a trans-Atlanticist. She abhors the EU but loves NATO. In fact, she would love to undermine Brussels from the inside, while making sure the EU does not cut off those crucial flow of funds to Rome.
So she does confound primitive, crypto-âLeftâ American âexpertsâ, who blame her at best for âsemi-fascismâ â and thus more dangerous than Marine Le Pen or Viktor Orban. Then she gets immediate redemption because at least vocally she proclaims to be anti-Russia and anti-China.
But then again, the temptation to burn her at the stake is too great: after all sheâs appreciated by Steve Bannon, who proclaimed four years ago that âyou put a reasonable face on right-wing populism, you get elected.â And she keeps terrible company: Berlusconi is dismissed by the woke/neoliberal Americans as a âPutin buddyâ and Salvini as a âfirebrand nationalistâ.
Itâs imperative to imbibe a strong dose of reality to form a clear picture of Giorgia. So letâs turn to a fine Turin intellectual and author, Claudio Gallo, now benefitting from being far away from the toxic fog of Italian mainstream media, mostly a fiefdom of the dreaded Agnelli/Elkann family.
Here are Galloâs key takeaways.
On Giorgiaâs popular appeal: Her support âamong working people is a fact. We can see that in every survey. However, this is not a new tendency, and it started in the time of Berlusconi. At this moment, the working class began to vote for right-wing parties. But I believe this is not an Italian-only trend. If you look at France most of the representatives of the traditional working class vote for Le Pen, not the socialist parties. It is a European trend.â
On the âDraghi agendaâ: âYou can figure out the kind of governments we just had as a European Troika with one man only â Mario Draghi. They have proposed the most brutal economic reforms inspired by Brussels, such as extreme flexibility and fiscal austerity. These are policies that affect mainly the middle classes and poor people (âŠ) The Draghi government decreased welfare spending by 4 billion euros next year and another 2 billion in two years. It means 6 billion less will be available for healthcare in two years. There were cuts also in the school system. Polls show that more than 50% of Italians did not support Draghi and his program. Draghi comes from the most powerful part of society, the banking sector. In the leading Italian media, it is impossible to find any critics of this agenda.â
On a possible Berlusconi power play: âHe has quite a huge audience. He is accredited with roughly 8% of the vote. After all these years and all his judicial difficulties, it is still a lot (âŠ) A few months after the election, we can imagine a situation in which Meloni is forced to resign because she cannot cope with the harsh winter (cost of living out of control, social unrest). It will be the time of a Grosse Koalizion to save the country, and Berlusconi, with his strong stance on NATO and Europe, is ready to play his cards. Berlusconi would be the key to a new coalition. He is always ready to get any compromise done.â
On âfirebrandâ Salvini: âHe is the leader of a very divided party. He used to have a populist agenda, but at the top of his party you can also find some technocratic figures like Giancarlo Giorgetti, a staunch defender of the interests of the North Italian Confindustria. Salvini is losing consensus within his electoral base, and Meloni stole his votes along with Movimento Cinque Stelle. His party is divided between old politicians that dreamed of some federation to strengthen the autonomy of the Northern regions and others more inspired by Marine Le Penâs right. Itâs a volatile mixture.â
On Giorgia under pressure: âThe pressure of the economic issues, inflation, price of gas and so on, will make Meloni, a very tough politician but not an expert statesman, probably resign. In Italy, there is a political stalemate; like everywhere in the West, democracy doesnât work correctly. All parties are pretty much the same, with some cosmetic differences; everyone can still make a coalition with anybody else, without any regard to principles or values.â
âThe more things changeâŠâ: âThe man behind the foreign policy of Fratelli dâItalia is an ex-ambassador in US and Israel, Giulio Terzi di SantâAgata. I cannot see how his opinion differs from Draghiâs. The same neoliberal and Atlantistic background, the same technocratic resume. Meloni is simply capitalizing that she didnât participate in the last government, even if she doesnât offer any alternative. Meloni repeats that nothing will change; we will send money and arms [to Ukraine]. She sends a lot of signals to NATO and the EU that they can count on her when it comes to foreign policy. I think she is sincere: she is surrounded by the people who will make it real. It is very different from the situation a couple of years ago when Meloni published a book in which she said we need to have a good relationship with Putin and build a new European order. Now she has completely changed her position. She wants to be seen as a trustworthy future premier. But the polls say that 40-50% of Italians donât like to send weapons to Ukraine, and support every diplomatic measure to end the war. The cost of living crisis will strengthen this position among the people. When you cannot warm your house, everything changes.â
The real cage match
No one ever lost money betting on the EU oligarchy always behaving like a bunch of self-entitled, stubborn, unelected pricks. They never learn anything. And they always blame everyone except themselves.
Giorgia, following her instincts, has a decent shot at burying them even deeper. She is more calculating and less impulsive than Salvini. She wonât go for a euro exit and much less an Italexit. She wonât interfere with her Finance Minister â who will have to deal with the ECB.
But she remains a âsemi-fascistâ, so Brussels will want her scalp â in the form of cutting off Italyâs budget appropriations. These Eurocrats would never dare doing it against Germany or France.
And that brings to the political set up of the â supremely undemocratic â European Council.
Giorgiaâs party is a member of the European Conservatives and Reformists bloc, along with only two other members, the PMs of Poland and Czech Republic.
The Socialists & Democrats bloc has seven members. And so does Renew Europe (the former âliberalsâ): that includes the president of the European Council, the supremely mediocre Charles Michel.
The center-right European Peopleâs Party has six members. That includes Ursula âMy Grand Dad was a Naziâ von der Leyen, the sadomaso dominatrix in charge of the European Commission.
The prime catfight cage match to watch in fact is Giorgia versus dominatrix Ursula. Once again, Mediterranean swagger against the Teutonic techno-barbarians. The more Brussels harassment of Giorgia, the more she will counter-attack, with full support of her post-truth Roman legions: Italian voters. Grab the Negronis and the Aperol Spritz; itâs show time.
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