Just in:
Booming Region Fuels Innovation Surge // New Dynamics in Cryptocurrency Security: ZUHYX Builds the Strongest Fund Protection System // Cairo Recognizes Arab World’s Creative Luminaries at Award Ceremony // Abu Dhabi Secures US$5 Billion in Fresh Funding // Leading with Compliance, ZUHYX Earns the Canadian MSB License // Hong Kong Unveils April 30 Launch for Landmark Crypto ETFs // Ministry of Agriculture Supports Taiwanese Tea’s Entry into Singapore Market to Boost Global Presence // Prince Holding Group’s Chen Zhi Scholarship Clinches Silver Stevie for CSR Excellence at Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards // Dubai Gears Up for Second FinTech Summit as Funding Surges // DIFC Courts Cement Role as Top English Dispute Resolution Choice // Lai & Turner Law Firm PLLC Welcomes Eric Strocen as Director of Family Law Division // ZUHYX Exchange: Embracing Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Future // Galaxy Macau’s Sakura Cultural Festival Kicked off in Splendor // UAE Scrutinizes Report on Racial Discrimination Treaty // World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Etihad Airways Announces Paris Service with A380 // UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // Oman Seeks Growth Through Strategic Economic Alliances // ESG Achievement Awards 2023/2024 is Open for Application, Celebrating Innovative Sustainable Practices and Responsible Risk Management //

Italy's 'demolition man' the architect of his own downfall

By Crispian Balmer
| ROME

ADVERTISEMENT

ROME When former Italian president Giorgio Napolitano tapped Matteo Renzi as prime minister in February 2014, he urged his younger colleague to change the constitution in order to make it easier to govern Italy.

Early this year, Napolitano fretted that Renzi was taking the wrong approach in doing so.

ADVERTISEMENT

A referendum on the constitutional changes had been called. But instead of focusing the election campaign on the merits of the ambitious reform, Renzi had turned it into a de facto plebiscite on himself by promising to quit if people voted against the changes.

At a time when anti-establishment parties were gaining ground across Europe and when the Renzi government was struggling to revive an anaemic economy, a popularity contest was a dangerous tactic, Napolitano believed.

“If Renzi loses, Italy will also lose a lot of credibility,” Napolitano, then 90, told friends at an April dinner, according to one person present. He said he had warned Renzi, 50 years his junior, that it was a “mistake to make this too personal”.

On Sunday, Renzi paid the price for that mistake. Sixty percent of Italians voted to reject the plans to abolish a directly elected upper house Senate and streamline the legislative process. Within an hour of polls closing, a chastened Renzi announced his resignation.

Interviews with a dozen government officials, ministers and close advisers show that Renzi persisted in effectively making the ballot a vote on himself – despite warnings from some of his closest advisors not to do so.

That allowed disparate politicians from opposition parties to join forces in egging on the electorate to oust him.

Even after acknowledging in August that the personalisation had been a mistake, Renzi sidelined most of his own ministers to dominate primetime television shows, giving more than 20 major media interviews in the last week of campaigning alone. 

Renzi’s defeat is the story of a personal gamble that went awry. But it also speaks to the fast-shifting loyalties of Europe’s electorate amid the rising appeal of populist parties across the continent.

Renzi stormed to power following a ruthless internal party coup less than three years ago, hailed as an anti-establishment figure determined to revitalise a lethargic country. But he was ultimately rejected by the very people he had tried to court, the young and disaffected, who viewed him as one of the elite.

Renzi is not disappearing from the political scene; he remains the leader of Italy’s biggest party and, at the age of 41, has time to craft a return to government. Still, his biggest rivals are the anti-system 5-Star Movement, founded by a populist former comedian.

SAFE BET

Renzi raised the stakes on his flagship reform early in his tenure. “I will bet all my political life on it,” he told Corriere della Sera newspaper in March 2014.

At the time it appeared a safe bet. The opposition party Forza Italia (Go Italy!) of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi had given its support and opinion polls suggested that more than 70 percent of the electorate were in favour.

But Berlusconi soon pulled his backing as a broad policy pact with Renzi collapsed. That left the government alone as it embarked on the most comprehensive overhaul of the constitution since its introduction after World War Two.

It took two years of fierce debate before the changes finally got parliamentary approval in April. But because they involved altering the constitution, Renzi had to call a referendum to get it turned definitively into law.

That same month, with polls still predicting victory, Renzi hired the Messina Group, headed by Jim Messina who led U.S. President Barack Obama’s successful 2012 re-election bid, for help in developing his campaign strategy.

Messina at the time was also advising British Prime Minister David Cameron in his efforts to keep Britain in the European Union – an effort that failed.

Cameron’s defeat in the June “Brexit” referendum shocked Renzi, according to close associates. The premier drew two lessons: He would not repeat Cameron’s so-called “project fear”, which had predicted dire economic troubles in case of defeat. Renzi also decided he would not associate himself too closely to corporate leaders to avoid accusations that he was in the sway of big business.

Still, Renzi continued putting himself centre stage, meaning that the merits of his reform were being drowned out. Messina found it hard to convince Renzi to do otherwise, a source close to the prime minister said.

“The prime minister needs to be a bit more malleable,” the communications maestro told the premier’s inner circle in July, provoking a burst of laughter, according to someone present. Messina’s office declined to comment.

   

GENIE HAS ESCAPED

Polls showed momentum slipping from Renzi in the summer.

In August, the premier finally acknowledged in interviews that he had been wrong to pin his future to the referendum. He tried to change direction by refusing to discuss the vote in connection with what he would do if he lost.

But the change in tack came too late: Leaders of the political opposition accused Renzi of trying to go back on his promise to resign.

“The genie had escaped and it was impossible to put it back in the bottle,” said Matteo Richetti, a lawmaker from the ruling PD who was in constant touch with Renzi.

In the three weeks before the Dec. 4 vote, the prime minister went back to his original strategy — playing on his own appeal to try to sway voters and making clear he would indeed quit if he failed.

He also played the fear card, warning that defeat could open the door to a tax-hiking technocrat government and presenting himself as the only guarantor of stability.

Instead of keeping his distance from business leaders, he campaigned alongside Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne, even though a government minister urged against it.

“He didn’t listen,” the minister said.

The key campaign decision-making in the final weeks was taken by Renzi and a trio of most loyal supporters — his spokesman Filippo Sensi, Reforms Minister Maria Elena Boschi and long-time political adviser Luca Lotti.

The quartet would speak every day to compare notes and discuss ideas. People on the fringes sometimes felt excluded and complained of poor communications.

“They haven’t given me any speaking points,” said one lawmaker from Renzi’s Democratic Party as he was about to appear on a television debate. “There is no coherent command centre, you just have to hope you get the message right.”

But Renzi’s message ended up falling flat. He suffered a far heavier defeat than the polls had predicted.

“I have lost and I say it with a lump in my throat.” Renzi said in the early hours of Monday, announcing his resignation. “I think I did everything I possibly could.”

(Additional reporting by Silvia Ognibene, Massimiliano Di Giorgio, Giselda Vagnoni and Stephen Jewkes; Editing by Alessandra Galloni)

-Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Leading with Compliance, ZUHYX Earns the Canadian MSB License // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // GE Jun, Chairman and CEO of TOJOY, Delivers an Inspiring Speech: “Leaping Ahead Again” // Dubai Gears Up for Second FinTech Summit as Funding Surges // ESG Achievement Awards 2023/2024 is Open for Application, Celebrating Innovative Sustainable Practices and Responsible Risk Management // Why Lok Sabha Election For 20 Seats In Kerala Is Crucial For Future Of Left In Indian Politics? // UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // UAE Scrutinizes Report on Racial Discrimination Treaty // Hong Kong Unveils April 30 Launch for Landmark Crypto ETFs // Lee Chong Wei Shows Up On Chinese Hot cultural Talk Show “SHEDE Wisdom Talents”, Talking About “Crossing The Hill” // DIFC Courts Cement Role as Top English Dispute Resolution Choice // Lai & Turner Law Firm PLLC Welcomes Eric Strocen as Director of Family Law Division // Telecom Giant Du Eyes Crypto Integration for FinTech Platform // New Dynamics in Cryptocurrency Security: ZUHYX Builds the Strongest Fund Protection System // Oman Seeks Growth Through Strategic Economic Alliances // AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference // Prince Holding Group’s Chen Zhi Scholarship Clinches Silver Stevie for CSR Excellence at Asia-Pacific Stevie Awards // Etihad Airways Announces Paris Service with A380 // ZUHYX Exchange: Embracing Social Responsibility for a Sustainable Future //