ROME: Italy’s Senate will hold an open vote next month on whether to expel Silvio Berlusconi from parliament because of a tax fraud conviction after an upper house committee narrowly rejected the former prime minister’s bid to make the ballot secret.
The decision has been the subject of intense wrangling, with the billionaire media magnate’s political enemies fearing a secret vote might allow him to escape expulsion through backroom dealings.
A special Senate panel voted by 7 to 6 in favour of an open vote, overruling objections from Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PDL) party, which argued that votes on individual senators are traditionally held in secret.
“The panel has voted but it’s given birth to a constitutional monster,” PDL Senator Anna Maria Bernini told reporters. “This was a decision aimed against one person.”
No date has yet been set for the vote, but the Senate agenda is full until November 22, requiring a change to the timetable if the ballot is to be held before then.
Berlusconi is expected to lose his seat in the upper house after Italy’s top court found him guilty in August of being at the centre of a giant tax fraud scheme at his Mediaset television empire.
But the expulsion procedure is proving long and divisive, with the PDL repeatedly trying to delay the vote, which would strip its leader of parliamentary immunity and leave him open to arrest in a string of other cases.
Yesterday’s decision prompted a flood of anger from Berlusconi’s supporters, stoking tensions in Prime Minister Enrico Letta’s unwieldy coalition between the PDL and the centre-left Democratic Party (PD).
“Democracy was murdered in the Senate today,” said Daniela Santanche, one of the 77-year-old leader’s most hardline loyalists. “How can anyone still maintain on the basis of some false idea of stability that this government serves the country?”
The full Senate, where there is a majority in favour of expelling Berlusconi, must vote before the former prime minister can be stripped of his seat under a law passed last year banning convicted criminals from parliament.
However, the showdown has been delayed by heated disagreement between the PDL and Letta’s PD, and aggravated tensions between Berlusconi hardliners pressing for a rupture with Letta and moderates around PDL secretary Angelino Alfano who want to keep supporting the government.
“The decision of the Senate panel should be respected,” PD secretary Guglielmo Epifani said in a statement. “People should lower their tone and remember that the law is supposed to be the same for everyone.”
Letta, who survived an attempt to bring down the government earlier this month, has expressed confidence that he has the numbers in parliament to keep going even if Berlusconi decides to withdraw support from his coalition.
Reuters