Posted By Joshua Keating Share

Reuters is reporting that Italian President Giorgio Napolitano just announced that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi will be stepping down following the approval of a new budget law. While Berlusconi won a parliamentay vote on the law today, he's lost his majority in parliament, including his most important coalition partner Umberto Bossi. After all of Berlusconi's miraculous recoveries over the years, it wouldn't have been shocking if he had found a way to hang on, but this does indeed appear to be the end of the line for one of the world's most intriguing political figures.

Berlusconi, who rose from obscurity to become his country's most powerful media mogul and politician through the combined persuasive power of right-wing populism, scantily-clad showgirls, and the old-fashioned schmoozy charm he carried over from his days as a cruise-ship nightclub entertainer, has never really made much sense to outsiders.

He's been implicated in enough criminal conspiracies to put Whitey Bulger to shame and more sex scandals than Caligula. His public comments about women (“[Right-wing female politicians are] "more beautiful" [and] "the left has no taste, even when it comes to women.”), his own sexual appetities ("It's better to like beautiful girls than to be gay"), racial minorities, ("Obama is young, handsome and also tanned"), earthquake victims ("[T]hey should see it like a weekend of camping"), and even Italy itself, ("I'm leaving this shitty country") would have ended the career of a lesser politician. Nonetheless, in his ability to appeal to average Italian voters, he was unsurpassed. 

Journalist Beppe Severgnini summed up the prime minister's unique genius in a recent interview with me:

So he knows nothing about the Internet, but he's really a pro at daytime television. So in terms of appealing to the lower-middle class on TV, he's the master of the universe. He knows what to say, how to dress, how to put on makeup, everything. He's a master salesman.

Zelig, the character in Woody Allen's film, transforms himself so he will be accepted. That's key to understanding Berlusconi. He wants to be loved, but also to sell something to his brothers. He's a very strange combination of a great salesman and a very insecure man who needs to be appreciated.

Given the sheer number of shenanigans and scandals he's been able to survive through in a two-decade political career in an ostensibly democratic country, it's hard to think of a public figure with more raw political skill on the world stage today. After everything, it finally took the greatest global financial crisis since the depression to bring him down. 

Berlusconi has returned to the premier's office after defeat before, in 2001 and then in 2008. But at 75-years-old, another return seems unlikely. But given his stranglehold on the country's broadcast media and many pending court cases - from which he will no longer be able to claim immunity - he's likely to remain a public figure for some time. This tenor has probably not sung his last aria quite yet.  

 

MR FRED

6:25 AM ET

November 9, 2011

It has been reported many

It has been reported many times before that Silvio Berlusconi's demise is imminent. As the true stayer of world politics I am reluctant to believe he is finished until he collects his pension. He will work from home in one of his opulent mansions to find anyway he can to stay. No one has faced more curve balls than this remarkable politician.

 

NAVANAVONMILITA

10:31 AM ET

November 9, 2011

Silvio Berlusconi, the future prime minister of Iran

My dear Joshua,

Napoleon was originally exiled in 1814 on the island of Elba off the Tuscany coast in Italy.

Napoleon returned to France from Elba in 1815 and began the "100 days" of renewed French military actions, which ended at Waterloo. Subsequently he was sent on HMS Bellerephon to St. Helena in the South Atlantic, where he was held prisoner by the British until 1821 when he died.

If Napoleon could do it, return to power, why not an experienced politician, Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi?

Maybe, Italians are dumb, not to read the European history. Maybe, Americans and Israelis would rescue Iran from all them Shia Satans, Oops, Mullahs pretending to know democratic processes and cook an atom bomb or two in their little Devil's kitchen to frighten little boys and girls of Israel and America and preemptively attack her, demolish her religious fundamentalist Mullah regime and install Silvio as a new malleable and capable politician as a puppet prime minister to rule the country, suitably renamed as "AmerIsrael" Democratic Republic?

If I were Barack Obama, thank God almighty, I am not, I would get hold of Silvio Berlusconi before Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy demand his extradition/deportation to the famous French prison, Bastille in Paris, France for as yet unnamed crimes against EEU.

Being irresponsible politician, is not on the short list.

...and I am Sid Harth@arabuhuru.org

 

BEINGTHERE

10:39 AM ET

November 10, 2011

Bunga Bunga upends lots of big careers

Berlusconi was a distracting sideshow when times were good. Wonder if Bill Clinton would have survived his Bubba antics if he were acting out in the Oval Office in the midst of a poor economy, two pointless wars and his country's citizens falling deeply into poverty with few prospects for jobs?

The global financial crisis is changing the way voters view leadership. We're once again becoming interested in competence, discipline, message - and maybe even character. This is why jovial Herman Cain's campaign will soon bite the dust and Newt Gingrich's will soon follow.Who's to know what will happen in 2012. Some of us are hoping it will be the experienced, confidence Hillary Clinton.

Thank you for the good times, Silvio. Everybody loves a clown.

 

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