Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Under the beach umbrellas

Italy’s fragile political system’s new test
by
October 2022, no. 447

Under the beach umbrellas

Italy’s fragile political system’s new test
by
October 2022, no. 447
Giorgia Meloni, leader of Italian far-right party Fratelli d'Italia (photograph by Nicolò Campo/Alamy)
Giorgia Meloni, leader of Italian far-right party Fratelli d'Italia (photograph by Nicolò Campo/Alamy)

In 1994, Italian photographer Massimo Vitali, seeking to understand the Italy which had swept Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (FI) comprehensively into power, took his camera to the beach at Marina di Pietrasanta ‘to see who the Italians were … [and] to understand their attitudes … at that precise moment in history’. In 2022, Italian politics returns to the beaches for a campagna balneare (a seaside campaign) conducted in a summer atmosphere of crisis when most Italians are taking their annual vacation.

The election was precipitated when the Five Star Movement (M5S) removed its support from the government of national unity led by Prime Minister Mario Draghi. The Italian constitution provides for a government to be elected within seventy days (with a 25 September election date). President Sergio Mattarella was obviously displeased to have to announce the dissolution of the government which he had created, and which had received international recognition and restored Italian credibility. In Draghi, Italy had an innovator, a moderniser, and, above all, a capable interpreter of the European Union’s thinking.

From the New Issue