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The Italian General Election of 13 May 2001: Democratic Alternation or False Step?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
Extract
On 13 May 2001, Italy Elected To Power A Centre-Right Coalition headed by the media magnate Silvio Berlusconi. Forza Italia, the political party founded by Berlusconi in 1994 when he first decided to enter politics, became the most widely supported political force in the country with almost 30 per cent of the popular vote. Forza Italia's success was partly a result of its ability to ‘cannibalize’ the votes of two of its smaller coalition partners, the Biancofiore, an electoral coalition between the Christian Democratic Centre (CCD) and the United Christian Democrats (CDU), and the Northern League (Lega Nord), both of whom saw their share of the vote fall sharply. The other party in Berlusconi's ‘House of Freedoms’ coalition, the National Alliance (AN), the formerly neo-fascist party that now sees itself as a pillar of the democratic right, held steady in electoral terms but remains very much a junior partner in the coalition.
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References
1 The articles referred to in this paragraph are: ‘Silvio Berlusconi desvio´ miles de miliones desde Tele5 a empresas de su propriedad’, El Mundo, 30 April 2001; ‘Silvio Berlusconi: An Italian Story’, The Economist, 28 April 2001. See also the accompanying leading article ‘Fit to Run Italy?’, which is the source of the quotation. A compilation of the principal critiques published by the foreign press can be found at www.larepubblica.it/
2 Agnelli’s remark was widely quoted in the Italian press on 2 May 2001.
3 The Times, 7 February 2001.
4 Berselli, Edmondo and Cartocci, Roberto ‘Il bipolarismo realizzato’, Il Mulino, 50:3 (2001), pp. 449–60.Google Scholar
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8 Perché ha vinto il centro-destra, p. 175.
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13 For a source in English making this argument, see Stanton H. Burnett and Luca Mantovani, The Italian Guillotine: Operation Clean Hands and the Overthrow of Italy’s First Republic, Lanham, Maryland, Rowman & Littlefield, 1999.
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