Beppe Grillo: Italy's new Mussolini
Beppe
Grillo: Italy's new Mussolini
Nicholas Farrell
Taken From: The Spectator
The stand-up
comedian Beppe Grillo, like the fascist dictator Benito Mussolini before him,
has a craving to take over the piazza and mesmerise the crowd. Where once young
Italians chanted the mantra ‘Du-ce! Du-ce!’ now they chant ‘Bep-pe! Bep-pe!’. But it is not just a
shared need to rant and rave at large numbers of complete strangers that
hirsute Beppe and bald Benito have in common. Worryingly, for Italy and also
for Europe (where democracy seems incapable of solving the existential crisis),
there is a lot more to it than that.
Beppe Grillo
founded the MoVimento 5 Stelle (M5S) in Milan on 4 October 2009. The capital
‘V’ stands for his signature slogan ‘Vaffa!’ which roughly speaking means ‘Fuck
off!’ — in his case, to everything more or less, except wind farms. ‘Surrender!
You’re surrounded!’ he bellowed over and over again at his rallies. The phrase
was traditionally very popular with Italian fascists. He was referring to all
Italy’s politicians, except his lot.
Now, less than
four years after its foundation, his movement is the largest single party in
the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house, after it secured 26 per cent of the
poll at this week’s inconclusive Italian general elections. It is not, insists
this fascist of the forest, a party. It is a movement. Parties, he is adamant, are
the problem, not the solution.
Mussolini founded
his Fasci di Combattimento in Milan on 23 March 1919 and less than four years
later he was prime minister. Fascism was not, he insisted, a party but a
movement. Parties, he was adamant, were the problem, not the solution. Fascism
would be an ‘anti-party’ of free spirits who refused to be tied down by the
straitjacket of parties with their dogmas and doctrines. This is precisely what
Grillo says about his own movement.
Mussolini was the
rising star in Italy’s Marxist party until his expulsion in 1914 because he —
like the French and German Marxists but unlike the Italian ones — was in favour
of Italian intervention in the first world war. He looked destined for the
scrapheap.
Grillo, a former
communist, was banned from national television in the late 1980s as a result of
his defamatory performances. Things did not look rosy for him either. Forced to
perform in piazzas and theatres, he took to ridiculing and demonising
politicians, and then in 2005 he founded a blog that quickly became the most
popular in Italy and a forum for the angry and the disaffected, mostly young,
for all those whose state of mind is defined by the word ‘Vaffa!’. He duly
began a national ‘Vaffa! Day’ or ‘V Day’ in 2007.
Shortly before he
founded his movement, he tried to become leader of Italy’s main left-wing party
— the ex-communist Partito democratico (PD) — but it would not let him stand in
its leadership elections. At this week’s elections, the PD’s coalition was a
winner of sorts with a majority of the seats in the lower house, thanks to the
latest Italian electoral law that gives the majority of seats to the party with
the most votes, however few. The PD’s coalition polled just 29.6 per cent of
the vote compared with the 29.1 per cent of Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right
coalition. But despite that, the PD grouping gets 340 seats to his 121. In the
senate, though, where different rules apply, no one has a majority.
If, however, the
PD had allowed Grillo to stand in its leadership contest, he would no doubt
have led it to overwhelming victory. Instead it chose the monumentally smug and
tedious former communist Pier Luigi Bersani. But we haven’t seen the last of
Beppe.
What gave
Mussolini popular traction is what gives Grillo traction: a virulent hatred of
parliament and the politicians who infest it. The dictator famously said he
could have moved his bivouacs into ‘this deaf and grey chamber’ but had chosen
not to. The comedian uses the same language. Whereas Mussolini spread the word
through his own mass daily newspaper Il Popolo d’Italia, and enforced it by
means of his blackshirts, Grillo does so through his website, Il Blog di Beppe
Grillo, and violent verbal abuse and ostracism of opponents. Whereas Mussolini
travelled by train to his rallies, Grillo travels to his by camper van.
‘I did not invent
fascism,’ said Mussolini, ‘I extracted it from the Italian people.’ Grillo did
not invent his movement, he says, he merely provided the humus — the internet
forum — in which it grew. During the election campaign, he did not give one
television or newspaper interview, because journalists, like politicians, are
the enemy. Both Mussolini and Grillo appeal to the spirit and soul rather than
the wallet and mind of Italians. Fascism was a civic religion and the Duce its
god. The MoVimento 5 Stelle is a sect, with Grillo its guru, and like all good
sects it does not have an office. Its HQ is not real, but virtual: Beppe’s
blog.
Italian fascism,
even though no one is allowed to say so, was a left-wing revolutionary movement
which Mussolini founded because the first world war had made him realise that
the proletariat is more loyal to its nation than its class. At the May 1921
general election, the fascisti won their first seats in the Italian parliament
(only 35). Yet just 18 months later, after the March on Rome in October 1922,
King Vittorio Emanuele III had appointed Mussolini prime minister.
At this week’s
elections, no coalition, let alone party, got more than 30 per cent of the
vote. Any government that somehow emerges from the debacle is bound to be
short-lived. History repeats itself first as tragedy, wrote Karl Marx, then as
farce: the comedian Grillo’s version of Mussolini’s March on Rome could be only
a matter of months away.
Fascism was able
to flourish thanks to the impotence and corruption of Italian democracy,
especially in the first two decades of the 20th century, which made it incapable
of dealing with an existential crisis — the threat of communist revolution. In
1945, with the fall of fascism and the monarchy, Italy returned to an updated
form of the same impotent and corrupt democracy. Through fear of dictators, the
new constitution severely limited the powers of prime minister, cabinet and
president, and complex versions of proportional representation made it
impossible for any one party to obtain a majority of the seats.
This was fine,
more or less, in the boom times. Not any more. Italy has the third highest
sovereign debt in the world as a proportion of GDP, its economy is in permanent
recession, its tax burden and red-tape suffocating businesses, and its labour
market paralysed by a forest of laws that make it virtually impossible to be
taken on full-time or fired.
As with fascism,
Grillo and his movement have flourished thanks to the impotence and corruption
of the Italian parliament in the face of the current economic crisis — the
threat of meltdown caused by the euro.
The unelected
economics professor Mario Monti, who replaced Berlusconi as premier in a palace
coup in November 2011, merely raised taxes and invented new ones.
But austerity is
not just raising taxes; it’s cutting spending. Monti did nothing to hack back the
monstrous debt (it rose from 120 per cent to 129 per cent). He did nothing to
stimulate growth. Youth unemployment is at 35 per cent, and unemployment in
total is much higher than the official 12 per cent if you count the hundreds of
thousands still technically employed but paid by the state not to work.
Like fascism,
Grillo’s movement is essentially left-wing and in favour of the state sorting
things out — the Italian state. But it is against the euro and Europe — and
Germany in particular.
Mussolini wrote
soon after founding fascism that it is ‘difficult to define’. Fascism does not
have ‘statutes’ or ‘transcending programmes’. Therefore ‘it is natural’ that it
should attract ‘the young’ rather than the old who are likely to refuse its
‘freshness’.
Grillo’s manifesto
is called ‘Il non statuto’. On his blog he says, ‘We’re all young … We’re a movement of many people who are
uniting from the bottom up. We don’t have structures, hierarchies, bosses,
secretaries … No one gives us orders.’
Welcome to the new
fascist future.
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