Italy’s rebel Five Star Movement joins establishment

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ROME, Sept 2, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Born 10 years ago from a grassroots
rebellion against traditional politics, Italy’s Five Star Movement has
evolved into a party capable of forging alliances with the far-right and now
the left.

Founded by comedian Beppe Grillo and digital marketing specialist
Gianroberto Casaleggio, the anti-establishment M5S initially refused any
alliances.

But March 2018 elections saw the M5S become the biggest party in Italian
politics with 32 percent of the vote, and they eventually formed a coalition
with Matteo Salvini’s populist, anti-migrant League.

A little over a year later, the M5S is now in talks with the centre-left
Democratic Party (PD) to form a new coalition after Salvini tried to bring
down the government in a failed power grab.

The M5S has lost ground to the League over the last 14 months, dropping to
17 percent in May’s European parliamentary elections, while the League went
from 17 percent last year to 34 percent this year.

“In Italy, given the constitution and the electoral law (which mixes
proportional representation with first past the post), the only way to enter
into power is to make compromises and that’s what M5S has learned,” said
Emiliana De Blasio, political science lecturer at Rome’s Luiss University.

“Without these compromises, they would have stayed in the corner of the
political landscape without ever being able to play a role in the country’s
public life,” she told AFP.

The M5S is atypical in its organisation and ideology, neither right nor
left wing, but rather created as an alternative to “establishment” parties,
as typified by their latest ally, the PD.

Its transformation from protest movement to governing party played out in
successive elections, starting in 2013 when it came in a surprise third
place.

At the time, it was the charismatic Grillo and his diatribes against
Italy’s political “caste” that dominated the M5S.

– U-turns –

Dignity, hope, transparency were the watchwords on Grillo’s extremely
popular blog and in his rally speeches.

“This position seduced voters exasperated by a political class
characterised by scandals and corruption, who felt abandoned by those in
government,” said political analyst Gianfranco Pasquino.

“But once in government the movement was confronted with the reality of
power and had to change its political line on a raft of subjects, which
disconcerted its own voters,” Pasquino told AFP.

This change coincided with the naming of Luigi Di Maio as the Movement’s
political leader.

In his 30s, with a relatively slick image compared to the unkempt Grillo,
the choice of Di Maio showed a party transformed and ready to move on from
its purely protest logic.

Besides forming political alliances, Di Maio’s M5S changed course on
several policies, notably on remaining in the eurozone.

For years M5S had a highly eurosceptic position, which went as far as
calling for a consultative referendum on keeping the single currency.

Days before the March 2018 election, the M5S abandoned any mention of
leaving the European Union.

The Movement is founded on the idea of participatory democracy, and any
future coalition deal with their former bitter rival the PD will be put to a
vote on M5S’s “Rousseau” online platform.

“Returning to the Rousseau system is going back to the M5S roots and a way
to reassure long-term activists that the movement has not been perverted by
power and that the grassroots still count, even if they don’t count that much
anymore,” said De Blasio.

“Especially from a democratic point of view, the fact that 100,000 people
— the number of those signed up to Rousseau — will vote in the name of the
10 million Italians who voted M5S in 2018, is questionable,” she said.