By Francis X. Rocca on 11.7.03 @ 12:05PM
Can right-wing xenophobia move in a Reaganite direction? Among the heirs of Mussolini?
"ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS OUT," reads the headline of a poster
recently plastered on walls all over Rome. Another bit of
demagoguery from Europe's far right? Sure enough, at the bottom
appear the name and logo of the National Alliance, largest of
several Italian parties tracing their lineage to Mussolini's
Fascists.
But now read between the lines: "THE VOTE FOR THOSE WHO WORK,"
the poster goes on to demand; then, in smaller type: "A proposed
law to give the vote to those who have lived honestly in Italy for
years …" Illustrating the text is a photograph of three
smiling people, including a black woman.
A black woman as poster child for the heirs of Mussolini --
what's going on here? To be sure, the gesture is a prime example of
Italy's baroque political theater. But it could be the start of
something far more significant, for Italy and the rest of
Europe.
Last month Gianfranco Fini, leader of the National Alliance and
vice premier of Italy, made headlines with a proposal to grant
resident aliens the vote in local elections. The news was
especially surprising because Fini was co-author of last year's
draconian immigration law, designed to make it harder for
non-Europeans to come and work here.
The two positions are not strictly speaking contradictory. Fini
says he simply wants to fight illegal population flows while
integrating those who arrive through proper channels. But politics
is about more than policy, especially in a country as rhetorical as
Italy. If last year's law sent the message that Fini is tough on
immigration, this bill sends the message that he is no
xenophobe.
On one level, the proposal fits in perfectly with Fini's
long-standing strategy to make the National Alliance mainstream.
Though he is on record as calling Mussolini the "greatest statesman
of the [twentieth] century," Fini has for years striven to wipe off
the taint of Fascism, by affirming his commitment to democracy and
his support for Israel.
Fini's bill is also a clever tactic in terms of parliamentary
politics. No one is more unhappy about the proposal than Umberto
Bossi, Fini's coalition partner and collaborator on the immigration
law, and a rabble-rousing pain in the neck for everyone on his side
of the aisle. Bossi has backed down from threats to leave the
government if Fini's bill goes forward, but with his record of
alien-bashing, doing nothing would make him look like an
opportunist or (far worse, in Italy) a weakling. Whether he stays
or goes, Bossi will henceforth be less of a problem for Fini thanks
to this bill. (Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, whose Forza Italia
is the largest party in this fractious coalition, clearly just
wishes the problem would go away.)
It's easy to be cynical about politicians, but there is likely
more to Fini's proposal than image enhancement or partisan
maneuvering. The vice premier is clearly someone who thinks in the
long term -- of his own career and thus of the policies he
espouses.
Fini understands that Italy, whose fertility rate has been below
replacement level for years, must come to terms with immigration as
soon as possible. If Italians working today want to collect their
pensions and be physically cared for in old age, they must let in
millions more foreigners. The only question is whether these people
will come in under a system that provides for their legal and
social integration, or through illicit and dangerous channels that
leave them alienated from the society on whose margins they
labor.
Italians and other Europeans are understandably anxious about
absorbing millions with strange languages, customs and religions.
The left preaches the virtues of multiculturalism, but this only
aggravates the fear that diversity will undermine community. That's
where Fini and his ilk come in. The right, which has credibility
when it comes to patriotism and traditional values, is the
political force that can make immigration palatable.
Will other European rightists recognize this reality and the
opportunity it offers them? In politics, as in fashion, Italy has
often been a trend setter. France's Jean-Marie Le Pen, a far more
virulent bigot than even Bossi, is handing over the reins of the
National Front to his daughter, who has already toned down the
party's anti-immigrant rhetoric. Le Pen's move may be less sincere
or substantial than Fini's. And there will no doubt be lots of
backlash, in France and elsewhere, if right-wing parties start
embracing immigration. But if they really want to govern Europe,
that is what they must do.
topics:
Religion, Law, Israel, Fascism, Immigration