The Ring-In: Italy's supposedly apolitical President, Sergio Mattarella, objecting to the victorious populist coalition’s choice of the eurosceptic, Paolo Savona, as Finance Minister, collapsed the government-formation process. Undaunted, Mattarella appointed an interim Prime Minister of his own choosing: a former high official of the International Monetary Fund, Carlo Cottarelli (above). Italy’s repudiation of the Euro, and even its departure from the European Union, cannot now be discounted.
RECENT EVENTS IN ITALY raise some disturbing questions about
the possibility of executing radical policy reversals in this country. While
New Zealand’s constitution is a considerably looser affair than Italy’s, it is
still worth pondering what might happen here if a newly-elected,
about-to-be-sworn-in government was promising to roll back the gains of
neoliberalism. Before attempting an answer, however, it is worth re-capping
what has happened in Italy.
Back in March, Italian voters went to the polls to elect a
new legislature. The results of that election were reasonably clear: the
traditional parties of both the left and the right suffered major losses and
the two leading populist parties, the Internet-based Five-Star Movement and the
anti-immigrant La Lega (The League) made significant gains. After
several weeks of intense negotiation, the two populist parties presented a
ministry led by Giuseppe Conte to the supposedly apolitical President of the
Italian Republic, Sergio Mattarella, so that he could swear them into office.
Rather than bestow his formal blessing on the new
government, however, the President objected to the populist coalition’s choice of
Paolo Savona as Finance Minister. Savona was an outspoken critic of the
European Union’s rigid economic policies and Mattarella was unwilling to
entrust such a person with Italy’s economic management. Not surprisingly, Conte
refused to comply and the coalition parties withdrew from the
government-formation process altogether.
Undaunted, Mattarella appointed an interim Prime Minister of
his own choosing: a former high official of the International Monetary Fund,
Carlo Cottarelli. Mattarella’s decision to ignore the will of the Italian
people and appoint a notorious neoliberal technocrat as their prime minister
has sparked both a political and a financial crisis. Italy’s repudiation of the
Euro, and even its departure from the European Union, cannot now be discounted.
Could such a blatant attack on democracy occur here? Does
our lack of a written constitution protect us from a similar intervention by
the executive arm of government?
The short answer, unfortunately, is – No.
The German jurist, Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) summed up the
fraught issues associated with a democratic system in crisis (he was writing
about the doomed Weimar Republic of the early-1930s) by posing a key question.
Who has the authority to identify the presence of a crisis, or emergency
situation, serious enough for the executive power to declare an Ausnahmezustand,
a “state of exception” in which the normal functioning of democracy is
suspended lest its continuance put at jeopardy the security and/or survival of
the legally constituted order? “Sovereign is he who decides on the exception”,
declared Schmitt.
In the New Zealand context, Schmitt’s formulation would
encourage the view that if a situation ever arose where the political and
financial security of the realm were about to be put at risk by a
yet-to-be-sworn-in government committed to implementing policies inimical to
that security, then the Governor-General would be justified in wielding her
reserve powers to prevent such a government taking office. As the sovereign’s
representative, she would be entitled to decide that the election result had
precipitated circumstances of such exceptional severity that a temporary
suspension of New Zealand’s democratic norms was justified.
The Governor-General would not, of course, be making such
critical constitutional decisions in a political vacuum. The moment it became
clear that a government of transformational radicalism was in the offing, and
that its leaders were absolutely determined to carry out their reform
programme, the principal defenders of the status quo would mobilise all their
resources to stop them.
The first to act would be the major financial institutions.
These would set in motion a rapid devaluation of the Kiwi dollar and instigate
a precipitate drop in share prices on the NZ stock exchange. These real-world
effects would provide the mainstream news media with all the excuse it needed
for a no-holds-barred assault on the parties readying themselves for
government.
Very soon after the media began campaigning, surrogate voices
speaking on behalf of the major right-wing parties would raise the possibility
of vice-regal intervention. They would be joined in this effort by
spokespersons from all the major right-wing interest groups: Federated Farmers,
the Employers and Manufacturers Association, Chambers of Commerce.
Simultaneously, conservative youth organisations would
unleash a whole series of social-media campaigns full of hair-raising
disinformation about the reform parties’ intentions so as to arouse maximum
public anxiety. Mass street demonstrations would follow which, if answered by
the followers of the reform parties, would be marred by widespread violence and
property destruction. If the reform parties declined to rise to the bait, then agent
provocateurs could be hired to do the job.
Finally, the various agencies of national security would
intervene with “hard evidence” of the reformers’ subversive intentions. Real or
not, these revelations would lift the intensity of right-wing opposition to a
whole new level. However reluctantly, all “responsible” opinion would now be
urging the Governor-General to act.
Anxious that the ongoing political and financial crises not
be allowed to deepen, the Governor-General would, with equal reluctance, agree
to exercise her reserve powers. The “caretaker” Prime Minister from the
previous government would be invited to remain in office pending new elections.
Needless to say, the much-maligned, misrepresented and now
deeply unpopular reform parties would suffer decisive electoral defeats. The
“state of exception” could then, with great solemnity, be declared over.
All of which leads to the inescapable conclusion that if
Grant Robertson didn’t already exist, Jacinda would have to invent him.
It’s one thing to promise “transformation” when none of the powers-that-be
believe you; quite another when they do.
Just ask the Italians.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 31 May 2018.