The Times - Prodi’s prevarications
Italy is once again being held hostage by the hard men of the Left

Difficult reforms, as Romano Prodi himself insists, are best pushed through at the beginning of a government’s term. Six months after his centre-left coalition won the narrowest of majorities, the outward signs that accompany all efforts to change Italy are present. Wildcat strikes, street-clogging demonstrations, parliamentary mutinies quelled only by the repeated resort to votes of confidence, plummeting public support for the Government and emergency conclaves of ministers who are themselves rumoured to be plotting to give the Prime Minister the order of the boot. So far, so familiar; autumn in Italy is synonymous with political crises, generally triggered by the annual effort to appear, at the least, to be tackling the country’s calamitous public finances.

Almost entirely missing from the mix, however, are the liberalising reforms that Italy urgently needs to get its economy moving. He has made some effort to open up competition within Italy’s cossetted professions and trades, few of which are natural constituents of the Left. The rest — public sector reforms, privatisation and overhaul of education, pensions and health — he says must wait until approval of the 2007 budget. Yet the budget is witness to the lock-hold the left-wing members of his coalition have on policy. …

The result is a budget that postpones the day of reckoning. There is nothing to help Italy to reduce its deficit. Worse, the recent fragile improvement in the economy is likely to be halted once the new taxes kick in; and these tax rises, the reverse of what Italy needs, will feed the national addiction to tax evasion. This display of timidity has only emboldened the Left. To have 250 budget amendments proposed by your own side is worse than unfortunate: it is near-chaos.

This week’s confidence vote was the eighth in six months. The Government will go on winning them out of fear of electoral defeat (at least until the two-year point in the Government after which MPs draw fat pensions for their “public service”). But by failing to stand up to the enemies of modernisation, Signor Prodi gives the impression that political survival is his only solid goal; and that he is content, to borrow from the British political lexicon, to be “in office but not in power”.

(What? A Lefty?)