Italy’s new anti-worker government: Build the class opposition!

STATEMENT by the CENTRAL COMMITTEE of the PARTITO DI ALTERNATIVA COMUNISTA

The elections for the bourgeois parliament did not reserve many surprises, substantially confirming the pre-electoral polls, albeit with some differences on which we will then try to say something. The right-wing coalition, driven by the result of the Fratelli d’Italia [Brothers of Italy], gains a solid majority of seats, so Giorgia Meloni will be charged with forming a government which, barring surprises that appear very unlikely, will follow the composition of the coalition.1

The analysis we made on the eve of the elections is confirmed: Meloni’s party has gathered, from an electoral point of view, a consensus derived above all from the discontent of broad layers of the petty bourgeoisie with the aggressive policies of the Draghi government. Unfortunately, it has also gathered consensus in large sectors of the working class: this is the responsibility, above all, of the reformist left (political and trade union), which supported (directly or indirectly) the anti-worker policies of the Draghi and Conte governments, facilitating the presentation of Fratelli of Italy as the only opposition force (actually completely imaginary), which thus collected a protest vote against Draghi’s anti-popular policies.

The “most far-right government since Mussolini”

With these words, CNN commented on the first exit polls less than an hour after the closing of the polling stations.2 This reading corresponds to that carried out also by the reformist left and, in part, by the Democratic Party and the “Terzo Polo”: with Giorgia Meloni a semi-fascist formation would go to the government.

Obviously, the origins of a series of exponents of Fratelli d’Italia are well known, who come from the National Alliance, heir to Almirante’s MSI (some of Meloni’s collaborators, such as La Russa, trained in the extra-parliamentary far right of the 1970s), as well as the unspeakable positions on topics such as the right to abortion, immigration, and civil rights in general. At the same time, it should be noted that some of these positions are traditionally common to the entire Italian center-right and, on some issues, also to some sectors of the Catholic “left.” The Democratic Party and the Third Pole then insisted on Meloni’s and Salvini’s ties with Putin, Orban, Le Pen, etc. All real ties, but they must not hide another aspect:

Not surprisingly, Giorgia Meloni’s first statements were marked by responsibility: “This is the time of responsibility, the one in which, if you want to be part of history, you have to understand the responsibility you have towards tens of millions of people.” Translated: responsibility towards the European Union, of the position of Italy within NATO, ultimately of the current affairs of the great Italian bourgeoisie. Not a fascist government, therefore, and not even the most right-wing in republican history.3 Certainly, however, a right-wing bourgeois government that, no doubt, is preparing to attack the workers and respond with repression to any legitimate struggle for wage increases and runaway inflation.

To date, Fratelli d’Italia is a party that does not have para-fascist gangs such as, for example, those of which Bolsonaro is strong in Brazil.4 This does not mean, of course, that it could not have it in the future, when the attacks of the next right-wing government should encounter stiff resistance from the workers. However, to date the alarms “to fascism!” are justified only by the desire to propose electoral “democratic” alliances “to stop the right,” appeals to “unity” (read: class collaboration), which in any case would not serve to bring down the government of Giorgia Meloni but only to prepare the alternation in favor of the center-left—perhaps this time with the Cinquestelle [Five-Star Movement, M5S]—in five years.

Even if the parliamentary majority is numerically stable, in the context of a difficult social and economic situation (and moreover aggravated by international tensions), the government will not have an easy time carrying out the cuts and attacks desired by the big bourgeoisie, also because the relationship between government and union bureaucracies could be less idyllic than with a government supported by the Democratic Party. The political situation of the next few years will, more than ever in the last decade, be determined by the class struggle.

Electoral data show an open rift in the country

Starting from the data of the right, Fratelli d’Italia stands at 26%, while the Lega collapses to 8.8% (at the previous policies it was 17%, while at the Europeans of 2019 it had risen to 34%), and Forza Italia is maintained at 8.1%, while Noi Moderati does not exceed the threshold. It can be seen that Giorgia Meloni’s party has imposed itself by engulfing the votes of the League in particular, which has been surpassed in all its traditional “strongholds” in the north. From a sociological point of view, although it is difficult to reason only from the first data without an in-depth study, it seems that the petty bourgeoisie and small entrepreneurs of the north (but also a large part of workers) have decided to vote FdI after voting for the League in 2018 and 2019, no doubt for the opposition, as far as the facade is concerned.

The center-left sees the collapse of the Democratic Party (PD) to 19.1%, practically a new all-time low, a result that led Enrico Letta to declare that he will not re-nominate himself as party secretary. Non Incisive + Europe and the Green Left Alliance, respectively 2.8% and 3.6%, while Di Maio is unable to enter parliament.

The Democratic Party pays, as does the League in the coalition of the right, for support to the Draghi government and the fact that it has based the entire electoral campaign on support for the “Draghi agenda,” as if this were a boast. The Third Pole, which, expressing the sentiment of that part of the bourgeoisie that had no faith in Meloni, aimed at a modest result from FdI and M5S so that there were no alternatives to the formation of a new executive of national unity with Forza Italia and PD.

The Five-star Movement reaches 15% nationally but is the first party in many southern regions; despite the two government experiences with Conte and support for Draghi, the M5S has maintained a presence in the working classes in the south. Evidently this is due, despite everything, to the fact that a part of the masses impoverished by the crisis perceive the meager citizenship income (workhorse of the M5s), today attacked from the right and from the left, as essential for survival. The brawl between Conte and Letta over who wrecked the Pd-M5S alliance (and therefore takes on the responsibility of having won the Right) is probably an electoral pantomime prelude to future government agreements between the two forces.

In the field of the “radical” left, the lists of Popular Union (PRC-PAP with De Magistris), which takes 1.4%, and Sovereign and Popular Italy (PC di Rizzo with Ingroia and other sovereign and red-brown formations), which stops at 1.2%. Both “alliances” do not even reach the percentages of Italexit di [Gianluigi] Paragone (1.9%), further demonstrating that the electoral messes, moreover imposed from above, do not lead to parliament (the only real objective of these lists) but to the demoralization of activists. This confirms the inexorable decline of the reformist left, which pays the price for decades of subordination to the center-left and bourgeois governments.

On a general level, it should be noted that abstention has reached its all-time high in Italy; while it does not in itself indicate an increase in awareness that the “democratic game” is a fixed match and that a alternative system is necessary, it certainly indicates a growing distrust of the bourgeois state and its parties.

Opposition to the new government can only arise outside parliament

If this is the picture, opposition to the new government can only arise outside parliament, in factories and workplaces, in schools, in popular neighborhoods, and wherever there is a fight for the rights of women, of LGBT people, of immigrants, etc. Exploited and oppressed, they will not have to place any trust in bourgeois parties or in the reformist left; these parties have been betraying the struggles for centuries. We appeal to all activists and left-wing militants to get out of the electoral perspective and join our revolutionary project, which starts from the struggles in which we are all engaged and tries to give them a general political and class perspective, and not to exploit them to enter in parliament or to support a bourgeois government deemed “progressive.”

Photo: Giorgia Meloni celebrates with her right-wing coalition partners.

The Partito di Alternativa Comunista is the sympathizing group of the International Workers League-FI in Italy.

Notes

1) As we write, only the percentages are known and not the actual allocation of proportional seats, but, given the numbers of single-member constituencies assigned to the right in both the House and the Senate, the parliamentary majority should be amply assured and such as to discourage the hypothesis of a coalition government with other forces on the model of the Draghi government.

2) https://www.la7.it/la7retweet/primo-premier-italiano-di-estrema-destra-dai-tempi-di-mussolini-il-tweet-di-cnn-sulle-elezioni-26-09- 2022-453125

3) We remember, for example, the Tambroni government in 1960, a single-color Christian Democrat, elected with the votes of DC and MSI, expelled from popular mobilizations after four months. Those were years in which, in “democratic” Italy, the police fired on demonstrators.

4) We remember the killing of Marielle Franco, city councilor of Rio de Janeiro for the PSOL, murdered by a paramilitary gang, apparently linked to the son of President Bolsonaro, in March 2018.

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