"For a generation, acceptance of the neoliberal doctrine that “there is no alternative” has paralyzed politics in the West. But what is the meaning of politics if there’s no alternative to the resulting Authoritarian Center, asks Diana Johnstone."
"The traditional governing parties, center “left” and center “right” all follow the same neoliberal policies and constitute the self-designated
“center.”
Mainstream media enforce center right claims to authority on the base of orthodox economic expertise, while the center left derives its authority from its “values,” centered on an identity politics version of human rights. “Center” sounds so reasonable, so safe from dangerous “extremes” and unpredictable populism. Against such threats, the Center presents itself as the champion and safeguard of “democracy.”
Mainstream media enforce center right claims to authority on the base of orthodox economic expertise, while the center left derives its authority from its “values,” centered on an identity politics version of human rights. “Center” sounds so reasonable, so safe from dangerous “extremes” and unpredictable populism. Against such threats, the Center presents itself as the champion and safeguard of “democracy.”
How true is this?
World Values Survey results indicate
that in Europe and the United States, people who describe themselves as
“centrist” on the average have less attachment to democracy (e.g. free
and fair elections) that those on the left, and even those on the far
right. This is not as surprising as it may seem at first, since
“centrists” are by definition attached to the status quo. In European
countries, the authoritarian neoliberal "center" is institutionalized in the European Union, which imposes economic policy over the heads of the
parliaments of the member countries, dictating measures which conform
to the choices of Germany and northern Europe, but are increasingly
disastrous for the Southern EU members.
The Rise of the Outcasts
The
Centrist fear of democracy was resoundingly confirmed by March 4
legislative elections in Italy. The Center was relegated to the margins
and outsiders burst in. The winner, with 32 percent of the votes, was
the Five Star Movement (M5S) whose campaign “against corruption” won
popular support in the impoverished South."...
[Ed. note: Government corruption also decided the US 2016 election. "The
biggest common denominator among Obama-Trump voters is a view that the
political system is corrupt and doesn’t work for people like them."...These 6.7 to 9.2 million Obama to Trump voters were "far more
than enough to provide Trump his electoral College victory."]
(continuing): "In second place, with 17
percent, was “the League”, formerly the Northern League – that is, a
party of rich north Italy chauvinists ready to secede from the “lazy
good-for-nothing” south. It took almost three months for this extremely
odd couple to agree to a coalition government.
The
mystique of the European Union is anti-nationalist, based on the theory
that “nations” are bad because they caused the devastating wars of the
twentieth century, while European unification is the sole guarantee of
“peace.” Convinced of their mission, the Eurocentrists have had no
qualms in throwing out the baby of democratic choice along with the
nationalist bathwater.
The
notion that “peace” depends on “Europe” persists despite the NATO
bombing of Serbia and European participation in U.S. wars in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Syria, not to mention EU participation in
the current major military buildup in the Baltic States against “the
Russian enemy.” Indeed, thanks to NATO, the EU is gearing for a war even
worse than the previous ones.
Since
the “nation-state” is blamed for evil in the world, the Eurocentrists
react with horror at growing demands in Member States for a return to
“national sovereignty.” This, however, is a natural reaction to the
economic and social disasters resulting from policies dictated by EU
institutions in Brussels. The 1992 Maastricht Treaty legally bound
member countries to centralized neoliberal monetarist policies; not only
“socialism” became illegal – even Keynesianism was ruled out. Promised
endless peace and prosperity, citizens of European countries were
cajoled into giving up their sovereignty to EU institutions, and many
now want it back.
Disillusioned Italy
Italian
disillusion is particularly significant. Italy was an exceptionally
enthusiastic founding member of the unification begun with the 1957
Treaty of Rome. And yet, Italy’s own history illustrates what can go
wrong with such unification, since the 19th
century political creation of a unified Italy centered in Turin led to
the enrichment of the industrial north at the expense of southern Italy,
where the splendor of Naples declined into chronic poverty, crime and
corruption. Now Italy itself is “the south” in the periphery of a
European Union centered around Germany.
Antagonism
between northern and southern Italy has given way to a much stronger
antagonism between Italy and Germany – each blaming the other for the
crisis.
It
is only fair to recall that Germans were very attached to their
Deutsche Mark and to their own austere financial policies. Germany could
only be lured into the common currency by agreeing to let the euro
follow German rules. France eagerly supported this concession based on
the notion that the common currency would unify Europe. It is doing
quite the opposite.
Germany
is a major exporting nation. Its trade with the rest of the EU is
secondary. It uses the EU as its hinterland as it competes and trades
globally with China, the United States and the rest of the world. The
proceeds of Germany’s favorable EU trade balance is less and less
invested in those countries but in Germany itself or outside the EU. In
the official German view, the main function of the Southern EU members
is to pay back their debts to Germany.
Meanwhile, Italy’s once flourishing industrial network has lost its competitive edge due to the euro. It cannot save its exports by
devaluation, as it was accustomed to doing. Italy’s debt is now 132
percent of its GNP, whereas the Maastricht Treaty governing the monetary
union puts a ceiling of 60 percent on national debt. And to continue
paying the debt, public services are cut back, the middle class is
impoverished, the domestic market declines and the economy gets even
weaker.
This is precisely the situation that has plunged Greece into ever deepening poverty.
But
Italy is not Greece. Greece is a small peripheral country, which can be
pounded to death by creditors as a warning of what can happen to
others. Italy, on the contrary, is too big to fail. Its collapse could
bring the whole EU crashing down.
Italy’s Potential Strength Through Weakness
The
traditional Italian parties had no solution beyond those that have
ruined Greece: cut back social spending, impoverish workers and
pensioners, and pay back the foreign banks, with interest.
The
odd coalition of the League and the M5S was obliged to try something
different: basically, to invest in the economy rather than abandon it to
its creditors. Their program combines lower taxes with Keynesian
stimulation of investment. Since the leader of the League, Matteo
Salvini, and Luigi Di Maio of M5S do not like each other, they selected
law professor Giuseppe Conte to be Prime Minister in their coalition
cabinet. The interesting choice was that of Paolo Savona for the key
post of Minister of Economy and Finance. Savona, whose long career has
taken him across the summits of Italian and international finance, was
certainly the most qualified choice imaginable. Savona knows everything
there is to know about the Italian economy and international currency
creation.
And yet, it was the appointment of this 81-year-old expert that created outrage in the Eurocenter.
The
uproar was spurred by the fact that in one of his books Savona had
described the euro as “a German prison.” Savona had also said it was
necessary to prepare a Plan B, to leave the euro if there is no other
choice. “The alternative is to end up like Greece.”
This hint of disloyalty to the euro was totally unacceptable to the European establishment.
The
Center struck back in the person of the largely figurehead President of
Italy, Sergio Mattarella, who used, or misused, his unique
constitutional power by refusing to approve the government. On May 28,
he designated as prime minister Carlo Cottarelli of the International
Monetary Fund – a man who represented everything the Italians had just
voted against. Known in Italy as “Mr. Scissors” for his advocacy of
drastic government spending cuts, Cottarelli was supposed to run an
apolitical “technical” government until new elections could be held in
the fall.
This
coup against the Italian voters caused momentary rejoicing in the
Authoritarian Center. The European Budget Commissioner (a German of
course), Günther Oettinger, was reported to be gloating over the
prospect that “the markets” (meaning the financial markets) would soon
teach Italians how to vote. Italy’s economy “could be so drastically
impacted,” he said, as to send a signal to voters “not to vote for
populists on the right and left.”
This simply intensified Italian indignation against “German arrogance.”
Meanwhile
Savona wrote a letter to President Mattarella which introduced a bit of
cold reason into an increasingly hysterical situation. He reminded the
president that an important meeting of EU heads of state was to be held
at the end of June; without a political government, Italy would be
absent from negotiations which could seal the fate of the EU. Italy’s
plea for economic change could expect French support. Savona denied
having called for leaving the euro; in the spirit of game strategy, he
had mentioned the need for Plan B in order to strengthen one’s position
before negotiations. He made it clear that his strategy was not to leave
the euro but to transform it into a genuine rival to the dollar.
“Germany
prevents the euro from becoming ‘an essential part of foreign policy’,
as the dollar is for the United States”, wrote Savona. But change
becomes necessary, as the dollar is less and less suitable for its role
as world currency.
Savona: Plan B just a negotiating tactic.
Indeed, the Italian crisis merges with a mounting trans-Atlantic crisis, as the U.S. uses sanctions as a weapon in competition with its European “partners.” The paradox is that Italy could use its very weakness to oblige Germany to reconsider its monetary policy in a moment when the German economy is also facing problems due to U.S. sanctions on deals with Russia and Iran, as well as protectionist measures. Savona’s message was that clever diplomacy could work to Italy’s advantage. In its own interest, Germany may need to accept transformation of the euro into a more proactive currency, able to defend European economies from U.S. manipulation.
Savona: Plan B just a negotiating tactic.
Indeed, the Italian crisis merges with a mounting trans-Atlantic crisis, as the U.S. uses sanctions as a weapon in competition with its European “partners.” The paradox is that Italy could use its very weakness to oblige Germany to reconsider its monetary policy in a moment when the German economy is also facing problems due to U.S. sanctions on deals with Russia and Iran, as well as protectionist measures. Savona’s message was that clever diplomacy could work to Italy’s advantage. In its own interest, Germany may need to accept transformation of the euro into a more proactive currency, able to defend European economies from U.S. manipulation.
It
was a matter of hours before Cottarella stepped back and a new
M5S-League government was formed, with Savona himself back as Minister
of Relations with the European Union.
Italy’s Double Jeopardy
The
new Italian cabinet sworn in on June 1 is riven with contradictions.
Despite all the released anti-EU sentiment, it is definitely not an
“anti-EU” government. Conte is back as prime minister. The new foreign
minister, Enzo Moavero Milnesi, is a staunch pro-European. As interior
minister, the northern Italy chauvinist Salvini – who doesn’t
particularly care for southern Italians – will get tough with migrants.
As minister of economic development M5S’ Di Maio will try to find ways
to improve conditions in the southern regions that elected him. Since
Salvini is the more experienced of the two, the League is likely to
profit from the experiment more than the M5S.
Some Italians warn that by leaving the “German prison” Italy would simply find itself even more dependent on the United States.
One
should never forget that ever since the end of World War II, Italy is
an occupied country, with dozens of U.S. military bases on its
territory, including air bases with nuclear weapons poised to strike the
Middle East, Africa or even Russia. The Italian Constitution outlaws
participation in aggressive war, and yet Italian bases are freely used
by the United States to bomb whichever country it pleases, regardless of
how Italians feel about it.
Worst
of all, the U.S. used its Italian “NATO bases” to destroy Libya, a
disaster for Italy which thereby lost a valuable trade partner and found
itself inundated with African refugees and migrants. While
international financial experts exhort Italy to cut government expenses,
the country is obliged by NATO to spend around 13 billion euros to buy
90 U.S. F-35 fighters and to increase its military spending to around
100 million euros per day.
Italy’s
economic prospects have also been badly hit by U.S.-enforced sanctions
against trade with Russia and Iran, important potential energy sources.
U.S.
economic aggression, in particular Trump’s rejection of the Iranian
nuclear deal, is the issue with the potential to bring European leaders
together at a time when they were drifting apart. But at present, the
Europeans are unable to defy U.S. sanctions in punishment for trade with
those countries because their international dealings are in dollars.
This
has already led to the U.S. exacting billions of dollars in fines from
the biggest French and German banks, the BNP and Deutsche Bank, for
trading that was perfectly legal under their own laws. The French
petroleum giant has been obliged to abandon contracts with Iran because
90% of its trade is in dollars, and thus vulnerable to U.S. sanctions.
And that is why the idea is growing of building financial instruments
around the euro that can protect European companies from U.S. retaliation.
The Disappearance of the Left
The
disappearance of left political forces has been almost total in Italy.
There are many reasons for this, but a curable part of the problem has
been the inability of what remains of the left to face up to the two main current issues: Europe and immigration.
The
left has so thoroughly transformed its traditional internationalism
into Europism that it has been unable to recognize EU institutions and
regulations as a major source of its problems. The stigmatization of
“the nation” as aggressively nationalistic has held back the left’s
ability to envisage and advocate progressive policies at the national
level, instead putting its hopes forever in a future hypothetical
“social Europe.” Such a transformation would require unanimity under EU
rules – politically impossible with 28 widely differing Member States.
Without such inhibitions, the far right capitalizes on growing discontent.
Another
related handicap of the left is its inability to recognize that mass
immigration is indeed “a problem” – especially in a country like Italy,
with a flagging economy and 20 percent official unemployment (although
this figure is probably too high, considering undeclared labor). There
is resentment that prosperous Germany issued a general invitation to
refugees, which for geographic reasons pile in Mediterranean countries
unable to cope. The mass influx of economic migrants from Africa is not
even “taking jobs away from” Italians – the jobs are not there to take.
These migrants fled war and misery to come to Europe in order to earn
money to send back to their families, but how can they possibly meet
these expectations?
It is all very well to extol the glorious hospitality of America entreating the world to “Give
me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless,
tempest-tossed to me…”. Such generosity
was suited to a new nation with huge empty spaces and rapidly growing
industry in need of a work force. The situation of a “full” nation in a
time of economic downturn is quite different. What is to become of the
tens of thousands of vigorous young men arriving on Italian shores where
there is nothing for them to do except sell African trinkets on the
sidewalks of tourist centers? To make matters worse, the great
contemporary thrust of technical innovation aims at replacing more and
more workers with robots. Leftist denial of the problem leaves its
exploitation and resolution to the extreme right.
Some leftist politicians in Italy, such as Stefano Fassina of the Sinistra Italiana
are waking up to this need. A left that dogmatically ignores the real
concerns of the people is doomed. A bold, honest, imaginative left is
needed to champion Italians’ independence from both German-imposed
austerity and the expensive military adventurism demanded by the United
States. But the interlaced problems created by unregulated globalization
do not lend themselves to easy solutions."..............
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