D’Alema’s government continued the fiscal discipline of Prodi’s administration but with less conviction and under continual pressure from various allies. It remained unpopular in the country, while on the right the division and resentments of 1994 were beginning to subside. A new law regulated television time for all parties, but nothing was done about opposition leader Berlusconi’s huge media advantage. The left began to hemorrhage votes and, in a highly symbolic defeat, even lost “red Bologna” in 1999 to the centre-right after 50 years of communist city governments. Another heavy defeat followed in the European elections. D’Alema limped on until April 2000, when a new electoral alliance between Berlusconi, the Northern League, and the AN crushed the centre-left in regional elections. D’Alema resigned, and Giuliano Amato assumed leadership of a further weakened centre-left government, which fell in 2001 when Berlusconi led his centre-right coalition back into power and began his second tenure as prime minister, one of the longest in recent history.
In the contentious and close elections of 2006, Prodi returned to the national spotlight to lead his centre-left coalition against Berlusconi, whom he replaced as prime minister. Just 20 months later, in January 2008, Prodi lost a vote of confidence in the Senate and resigned once again. Italian Pres. Giorgio Napolitano called for the formation of an interim government, charged with revising the country’s problematic electoral law that had been pushed through parliament by Berlusconi just months before the 2006 elections. Many cited the law, which overturned changes to the electoral system made in the 1990s, as the reason for Prodi’s downfall. Attempts to form an interim government failed, however, and Napolitano dissolved parliament in February. In the national elections held in April, Berlusconi—heading a new party known as the People of Freedom (Popolo della Libertà; PdL)—clinched a third term as prime minister. Martin Clark John Foot Scandal and the struggling economy
When an earthquake devastated the historic town of L’Aquila in April 2009, Berlusconi focused attention on the area by visiting victims of the temblor and relocating a Group of Eight summit to the city. His popularity suffered, however, as he became embroiled in a sex scandal involving a teenage model. Berlusconi took another hit in October 2009, when Italy’s Constitutional Court struck down a law that protected the prime minister from prosecution while in office. The ruling meant that Berlusconi could be tried on outstanding corruption and fraud charges, as well as other unrelated charges that would accrue over the following years. Italy’s economy sagged in 2009 as the global economic crisis drew the country into recession. The unemployment rate approached double digits throughout 2010, and disagreements between Berlusconi and former AN leader Gianfranco Fini triggered the departure of Fini and dozens of supporters from the PdL.
Fini retained his position as leader of the Chamber of Deputies, and, despite his differences with Berlusconi, Future and Freedom (Futuro e Libertà per l’Italia; FLI), the breakaway party that Fini formed, proved instrumental to Berlusconi’s political survival, as the embattled prime minister faced three votes of confidence in the latter half of 2010. In February 2011 Berlusconi was mired in yet another scandal when prosecutors alleged that he had solicited sex from an underage prostitute and had abused the powers of his office in the subsequent cover-up. That case was adjourned in April 2011, pending a review by Italy’s Constitutional Court. Berlusconi faced another confidence vote in June 2011 following crushing losses for the PdL in local elections. He survived that test, but the country’s ongoing political uncertainty, along with a host of economic factors, caused euro zone economic ministers to turn their attention to Italy’s public debt market.
For more than a year, financial markets had responded with trepidation to the debt crisis that had escalated for the so-called “PIGS” (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain) countries, as the EU and IMF called for the enactment of austerity measures in those countries and provided financial bailouts for Greece and Ireland, primarily to preserve the stability of the euro. Italy’s outstanding public debt, which approached €2 trillion, amounted to more than that of the four PIGS combined, causing some economists to label the country as “too big to fail.” In July 2011 the Italian legislature approved a basket of austerity measures, including massive budget cuts, in an attempt to calm markets and restore confidence in the Italian economy. Investors judged these efforts to be insufficient, however, and a public feud between Berlusconi and finance minister Giulio Tremonti put additional pressure on the Italian bond market. Interest rates on benchmark 10-year government bonds surpassed 6 percent, and in September 2011 labour unions responded to the proposal of an additional round of austerity measures with a one-day general strike that paralyzed the country. The ratings agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Italy’s sovereign credit score, and Berlusconi narrowly survived a vote of confidence in parliament, as even his allies began to question the viability of his administration.
On November 8, 2011, Berlusconi effectively lost his parliamentary majority on a key budget vote, and he announced his intention to resign after the passage of his proposed budget reforms. Italian bond yields topped 7.5 percent before the market began to respond to the news. The Italian parliament sped the approval of Berlusconi’s austerity measures, and he resigned within hours of their passage on November 12, 2011. Italian Pres. Giorgio Napolitano selected former European commissioner Mario Monti as Berlusconi’s replacement, and Monti began to assemble a government with the intention of assuaging fears about the Italian economy.
Monti’s technocratic government enacted a series of reforms during 2012 that resonated with financial markets, and the Italian benchmark bond yield receded to less dangerous levels. Among the austerity measures passed were a reinstatement of the national property tax, a pension freeze, and a dramatic hike in automotive fuel taxes. Although a majority of the Italian public continued to express approval and respect for Monti personally, support for his government declined throughout the year. Unemployment stubbornly remained above 10 percent, and consumer confidence plunged as Monti struggled to turn around an Italian economy that was saddled with €2 trillion (about $2.6 trillion) in debt.
Skepticism regarding the effectiveness of austerity—and of politicians in general—manifested in comedian Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement. Espousing views that were broadly populist, critical of the EU, and antiestablishment, Grillo used the Internet and social media to amass legions of followers. The protest party won victories in local elections in Parma and Sicily, as traditional parties, such as the Northern League and the People of Freedom, saw their influence slip amid financial scandals. Berlusconi, who was convicted of fraud and sentenced to four years in prison in October 2012, reinserted himself into the political scene in December of that year in a move that upset the delicate balance that had characterized Monti’s administration. Promoting a populist agenda and decrying Monti’s austerity measures as too harsh, Berlusconi declared himself a candidate for prime minister, and the People of Freedom withdrew its support from the government. Without a clear majority in parliament, Monti resigned as prime minister but remained in power in a caretaker role. Early elections were held in February 2013, and the result was a deadlock. Pier Luigi Bersani, the leader of the centre-left Democratic Party (Partito Democratico; PD), commanded a majority in the lower house of parliament. However, surprisingly strong showings in the upper house by the Five Star Movement and parties affiliated with Berlusconi meant that Bersani would not be able to form a government on his own. Monti’s centrist party failed to win enough seats to play a significant role in the formation of a coalition government.