The law and Veltroni Berlusconi will try to pass at least two fixed points. First, a high electoral threshold, to delete or resize the parliamentary representation of smaller parties. Second, full freedom for the parties that manage to enter parliament, to decide on alliances after the vote.
Writes Luca Ricolfi (su La Stampa di ieri) e mi sembra che abbia perfettamente ragione. Segue una lucida analisi degli scenari che potranno determinarsi a questo punto. Che sono essenzialmente tre. Il primo è che al centro nasca “una piccola Dc”, ossia una formazione di matrice cattolica abbastanza forte da risultare indispensabile sia per una maggioranza di centro-destra sia per una di centro-sinistra”. Ebbene, secondo Ricolfi, “il risultato non sarebbe molto brillante”. Perché il “potere ricattatorio” di quel partito avrebbe partita vinta. Penso che non si possa non essere d’accordo, o almeno io sono dello stesso parere.
Il secondo scenario è che “la piccola Dc "is actually small. In this case, note Ricolfi, there should be no problem. I would not be here very well: the experience of the past has taught me something ...
The third scenario is most unlikely:
initiative to occupy the center of the political system could be taken - rather than force, the Catholic world, has always been an integral part of the "party of spending" - from the minority reformist and liberal parties present both in and outside of them. I think politicians like Capezzone, Bruno Tabacci, Giorgio La Malfa, Nicola Rossi. Or members of the ruling class as Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, Mario Monti, Mario Draghi. In this case, what would arise at the center of the political system would not be a small Christian Democrats, but an average Liberal Democratic Party. Not the party of public employees and customers, but the party of modernization and merit. Even in this case would risk too much power to give a party the balance, but the risk - perhaps - would be offset by the liberal reformer and his vocation.
In this case, very unlikely indeed, according Ricolfi things would be much better. And here they are again in agreement. It seems to me that the professor has made a great contribution to make a little 'things clearer to the layman. It seemed only right to report them. A little 'less interesting, however, has been the contribution of Giovanni Sartori Corsera on yesterday, although his distaste for the "little people" (the small parties) I agree with everything.
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