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- <text id=93TT1490>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: When Enough is Enough
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ITALY, Page 47
- When Enough is Enough
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fed up with corruption, Italians now have a chance to revamp
- their political system
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE JOHNSON--With reporting by John Moody/Rome
- </p>
- <p> Who ever thought that when the cold war ended, one of the
- losers would be Italy? For more than four decades, the same
- handful of politicians and parties claimed power as a bulwark
- against bolshevism. But once the threat of a communist
- government in Rome fizzled, the cozy coalition system began to
- implode. In the past year, magistrates have uncovered a
- spaghetti of corruption--illicit political payments, bribery,
- kickbacks and outright thievery--so tangled that even the
- tolerant, rule-bending Italians have been shocked. Many watched
- with a mixture of glee and dismay as nearly 2,500 of the
- country's political and business elite, from former Prime
- Ministers and corporate executives to legislators and
- businessmen, were either arrested or notified that they were
- under investigation in the scandal called Tangentopoli, or
- "kickback cities."
- </p>
- <p> The powerful have never won much respect from people who
- regard everything from stop lights to income tax laws as
- suggestions, not orders. Corruption was always a part of life.
- What has changed, though, may be the willingness of Italians to
- do something about it. Voters will go to the polls this Sunday
- to register their outrage in a referendum on their discredited
- political system. A si vote--widely expected--will not undo
- decades of corruption or transform the political landscape
- overnight, but supporters of reform argue that the referendum
- is the best way to begin the difficult passage toward a more
- responsive--and responsible--political order. "If the yes
- vote wins, it will not mean a magic wand is waved against all
- the problems of Italy," said Mario Segni, leader of the
- reformers. "But at least we can have strong institutions. The
- old parties will disappear. For the first time, alternation in
- government will be possible."
- </p>
- <p> Since the end of World War II, 51 governments have
- shuffled in and out while the levers of power never really
- changed hands. The dominant parties--Christian Democrats,
- Socialists, Republicans--played musical chairs at leading the
- government in arrangements that ensured each would continue to
- get its share of patronage and spoils. Reformers such as Segni,
- a law professor and longtime Christian Democrat who quit the
- party in protest, place much of the blame on the electoral
- system of proportional representation that has made it virtually
- impossible for any party to win a majority.
- </p>
- <p> The key provision in the referendum would eliminate
- proportional representation in the selection of 238 of the
- Senate's 315 members and give each seat to the candidate who
- wins the most votes. The proposal has provoked opposition from
- small parties who were boosted into Parliament under the old
- system; others argue that the referendum does not go far enough
- toward limiting the parties' power over choosing candidates.
- Reformers counter that the country can no longer afford the
- instability created when 16 or 17 parties all vie for their own
- rather than the national interest. If the measure is approved,
- the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house, could be forced to
- follow suit.
- </p>
- <p> A second question would end the handout of government
- campaign funds--a total of $52 million--to parties that win
- at least 5% of the vote in national elections. Reformers concede
- that the measure will have no effect on illegal campaign
- contributions, which are at the heart of Tan gentopoli, but it
- is a small attempt to placate voters outraged over the estimated
- $50 billion to $100 billion paid in bribes and kickbacks to
- politicians.
- </p>
- <p> Genuine political reconstruction may be long in the
- making. Tangentopoli has left scarcely any prominent political
- figure untouched. The latest to be implicated: Giulio Andreotti,
- a pillar of Italian politics for half a century and seven times
- Prime Minister, who is under investigation for corruption and
- for having ties to the Mafia. He has denied both accusations.
- The possibility of a Mafia connection at the pinnacle of power
- opened the door on far more sinister misbehavior than bribe
- taking. Suddenly, high-level murders, including those of former
- Prime Minister Aldo Moro following his kidnapping by the Red
- Brigades in 1978 and of General Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, head
- of anti-Mafia operations in Sicily, in 1982, were being
- scrutinized anew. So was the embezzlement, allegedly by
- Christian Democrats, of $40 billion in aid intended to rebuild
- several southern cities after the 1980 earthquake, and the
- disappearance of huge sums of Third World development aid said
- to have been plundered by officials in Rome.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the prospect of more revelations, reformers hope
- the referendum will usher in a new era of Italian politics--even if its shape is still undefined. If, as widely expected,
- Segni announces formation of his own good-government party fresh
- from a referendum victory, his credibility might woo
- scandal-weary voters. However, it is unlikely he could put
- together an organization in time to benefit from the next
- elections, which could come as early as autumn. The populist
- Northern League led by Umberto Bossi has come on strong, but it
- must still extend its base of support beyond the northern
- provinces. Even if the referendum inspires new elections,
- Italians seem destined to endure yet another coalition,
- including, if no longer dominated by, the very parties
- responsible for their present quandary.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-