How Did EU-founder Member Italy Go Euro-sceptic?
Faizan Hashmi Published May 21, 2018 | 06:41 PM
Rome, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 21st May, 2018 ) :All eyes are on Italy as the far-right League and rebellious Five Star Movement close in on power, ringing alarm bells in Brussels as the country inches towards becoming the first EU founding member to have a euro-sceptic government.
Italy has seen a surge of populist and anti-establishment sentiment as the country struggles to emerge from a decade-long economic crisis amid sky-high youth unemployment and hundreds of thousands of migrants arriving on its shores.
Many Italians feel their country has been abandoned to deal with the migrants and have become disenchanted by the European Union as it is today. League senator and economist Alberto Bagnai, the inspiration behind leader Matteo Salvini's euro-scepticism, summed up the disillusionment with Europe by telling foreign reporters of the first thing he did after being elected to the Senate in March.
"I immediately went to thank (former prime minister) Mario Monti, without whom I would probably never have been elected," he said. Former European Commissioner Monti was named prime minister after Silvio Berlusconi's government fell in 2011 at the height of the economic crisis and he imposed stinging austerity measures to restore market confidence, including a pension reform that both the League and Five Star want to abolish.
Lorenzo De Sio, Professor of Political Science at Luiss University in Rome, told AFP their research showed that "70 percent of M5S voters want to stay in the euro and in the EU -- but not as it is now" and that "there has been excessive use of the populist label".
"In recent times .... anyone who criticises the European project is labelled a populist and anti-European," De Sio says. "Even pro-European parties like the (centre-left) Democratic Party or (Berlusconi's) Forza Italia announced their willingness to change the EU's current austerity policy during the election campaign." This disillusionment was captured by Italian president Sergio Mattarella, who in his speech on the State of the Union conference in Florence 10 days ago outlined "the diffuse belief among European citizens that the common project has lost its ability to truly meet the growing hopes of large sections of the population." However Gianfranco Pasquino, professor of political science at the Johns Hopkins school in Bologna, lays the blame for Italy's shift on the establishment parties Mattarella has served ever since entering national politics in the early 1980s.
"If we have come to this point it is because the pro-European parties, starting with the Democratic Party ... have not waged a real political and cultural battle for Europe," he says. "They have had an ambivalent attitude in many ways."
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