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Politicising Referenda: A Recurring Story

11/28/2016

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Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi staked his political future on the upcoming referendum // Ph: Palazzo Chigi/ Flickr
Analysis Italy's referendum has become a discussion about much more than just the constitutional changes put forward by Matteo Renzi. This is a significant issue, yet not an entirely new phenomenon in European democracies
Edoardo Tricerri

​Referenda are a powerful empowerment of the people, they transfer decision-making authority to ordinary citizens, they topple the fundaments of representative democracy and they abolish social distinctions as all one person is worth is just one single vote.
 
For the same aforementioned reasons, however, referenda can be utterly destructive. In order to have a solid outcome, in fact, citizens must be given enough accurate information, the ability to participate in a free and open debate, and shall vote on the matter of the referendum rather than on themes directly correlated. Yet, as the campaign for the Italian constitutional referendum has entered its final week, it is easy to note how this is not always the case.
 
In order to overcome the fragility and the instability of the Italian political apparatus, no more than two years ago Prime Minister Matteo Renzi called for a radical legislative reform to alter the current balance of power. The young Prime Minister from Florence put forth a new system that would reduce the upper chamber — the Senate — both in numbers and scope. As things withstand in fact, the legislative branch in Italy is characterised by two specular Houses with equal powers as both the Senate and the lower chamber — the ‘Camera dei Deputati’ — are called to vote confidence on the government and to approve all legislations. According to the promoters of the Referendum, the inefficiency of the Italian political system and its instability — Italy has had 63 Prime Ministers in the past 70 years — could in fact be ascribed to having two different chambers, often with different majorities, gridlocking political decisions.
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Citizens must be given enough accurate information, the ability to participate in a free and open debate, and shall vote on the matter of the referendum rather than on themes directly correlated.

​However, since its proposal the reform has encountered fierce opposition by a significant majority of the population as people lamented a supposedly undemocratic nature of the Referendum, given its attempt to strip people of their right to vote Senators and the centralisation of power it would entail. In this scenario, last January Matteo Renzi — whom at the time had more than 40% of approval ratings — linked his political future to the outcome of the Referendum saying he would resign if the reform were not to pass.

​Yet, after a corruption scandal hit his government last spring, Renzi’s approval ratings sunk to unprecedented lows, with the opposition from the radical left to the ultra-nationalist right ‘bandwagoning’ to use this vote to throw him out of office. All of a sudden, a Referendum on complex issues such as the repartition of power between regions and the national government became a plebiscite on the past and present reforms of the former Mayor of Florence.
 
To historians and politics geeks, however, such political phenomenon will not come as a surprise. In 1969, in fact, French President Charles De Gaulle called a very similar Referendum to change the composition and functions of the French Senate and, him too, announced that if the reforms were refused he would resign. In a France characterised by changing demographics and sentiments, as the wave of Civil Right Movements was altering the political focus of the young generation, the oppositions joined forces to depose the WWII hero, who was perceived as being too old to be fit for office. The reform was then rejected by 52% of the voters and De Gaulle laconically resigned the day after.
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Charles de Gaulle in 1960s France // Ph: Gnotype/ Wikimedia Commons
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Charles the Gaulle in 1960s France // Ph: Gnotype/ Wikimedia Commons

The phenomenon of politicising Referenda is therefore not a peculiarity of Italian politics but rather a recurring story that distorts political information. By politicising a technical Referendum, the oppositions and the Prime Minister himself have deprived Italian citizens of a free and open debate on the merits of the reform, transforming the vote of December 4, 2016 into a political quarrel on issues not even remotely affected by the institutional reorganisation. No-voters have led their campaign criticising everything Renzi has done since he took office, from education reform to economic policies, whereas the promoters of the Referendum have started a ‘project-fear’ depicting his resignation as a political catastrophe. In such a polarised debate little room has been left to discussing the proposed constitutional changes and the effects they would have on the Italian political apparatus since talking about GDP growth has greater significance for the general public than discussing legal clauses would.
 
Moreover, the already underperforming Italian economy and its fragile banking sector have been put in distress by the uncertainty of the vote, as the executive will be under the sword of Damocles until the 4th of December. For this reason, analysts have depicted the consequences of a NO-vote as a new Brexit for European markets, since the consequent power vacuum could allegedly put Italy on the verge of a new crisis, with serious implication for the whole Eurozone.
 
Despite being, in my view, an excessively pessimistic prediction — after all, Italy is the only Southern European country to have emerged from the 2008 crisis without external assistance — the risky consequences of the December vote in Italy should be held as a warning for any country that in the future will try to give Referenda different meanings from the one written on the ballot.
 
Referenda are a powerful empowerment of the people as long as voters are informed. When this ceases to be the case and they are turned into means to pursue political change, they just become a threat to a country’s democracy. TMM
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Egypt: does the end justify the means?

5/10/2016

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A graffiti of Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi // Ph: Thierry Ehrmann
Analysis  As President Sisi's politics of repression further pressurizes Egyptian citizens, we analyse the current state of Egypt and examine the difficult question: is the European Union taking the right stance on the country’s authoritarian regime?
Edoardo Tricerri

The death in Egypt of the Italian student Giulio Regeni — a PhD. candidate at Cambridge University — earlier this year shocked the world. The brutality with which Mr Regeni was relentlessly tortured and beaten before being killed and dumped on a road, left little doubts about an involvement of Egypt’s own security forces.
 
However, despite the lack of clarity in the ongoing investigations, the attention of Western officials has crystallised on a much broader problem:  the fear that escalating political repression and human rights abuses in Egypt are signs of weakness in President Sisi’s grip on power, potentially threatening the stability of a key Middle Eastern ally. The ‘Regeni case’, thus needs to be located in a complex geopolitical scenario, where Egypt’s political developments will have huge repercussions on the stability of the region, possibly affecting the rest of the world. 
 
From the burst of the Arab Spring in January 2011 up to today, Egypt has in fact been anything but a stable country. After the revolution against President Mubarak — the dictator who ruled the country for almost 40 years — the Muslim Brotherhood took power, electing to presidency the Islamist Mohammed Morsi in 2012. Yet, Morsi's government encountered fierce opposition from secularists and members of the military, which resulted in a coup d’état led by now President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who came into power in 2014 and soon reintroduced a nationalist authoritarian regime, only three years after the Tahrir Square demonstrations in Cairo.
 
Since the military’s takeover in July 2013, Egypt has thus been characterised by the denial of basic human and political rights, with more than 500 people — including Giulio Regeni — disappearing, and with several protesters and social activists being jailed and prosecuted without a fair trial. Such violent repression carried out by internal security forces, as well as the denial of any sort of liberty and the outlawing of the Muslim Brotherhood have further alienated a population already marked by the 40 years of President Mubarak’s dictatorship, creating deep cleavages between the regime and the oppressed. As the protests that burst out in the last days showed, the level of oppression that Egyptian citizens will bear is not unlimited, if the regime doesn’t show to be reasonable in its limitations to freedom it won’t take long before Mr Sisi will lose control over the population resulting in the umpteenth government change in the last 5 years.


The death of a young researcher has been minimised in order to preserve Mr Sisi’s legitimacy and aid against the spread of Terrorism

An equal threat to the stability of Egypt’s political apparatus is posed by the increasing presence of terrorist organisations in the region, especially in the Sinai Peninsula where the Islamic State-affiliated Sinai Province (SP) terrorist group operates. Due to the Suez Canal’s importance for global trade and its significance to Egypt’s economic security, it has become a core target of terrorist organisations. If an attack on the Suez Canal were to be successful — despite a multi-billion dollar investment in its expansion — the results of such strike would have a catastrophic impact on the regime, causing enough chaos to overthrow Mr Sisi.
 
To this already precarious puzzle, we must add the problematic relationship between demographic and economic growth in the country. Egypt currently has a per-capita income of about $3,500 and is growing only about 3 percent a year, far too slow to satisfy the needs of its 82 million people. Once again, such figures combined with the political repression, make it hard to believe that the status quo will uphold in the near future if the government does not find an efficient way to boost the economy and distribute profits fairly.
 
Given the several challenges highlighted above, the reasons behind the reluctance of the Western nations— and especially of the EU— in having a fierce stance against Egypt in the ‘Regeni case’ appear clearer. Looking at the facts with a bit of cynicism, it is evident that Egypt is right now facing several issues and that if strong foreign pressure was to be exercised against Egypt’s political apparatus the regime would quickly tumble down, with Islamist forces quickly regaining power. The West today cannot let the entire Maghreb fall in the hands of Islamist parties because of the threats it would pose on the security of the Mediterranean and in turn on the entire EU. Therefore, the death of a young researcher has been minimised in order to preserve Mr Sisi’s legitimacy and aid against the spread of Terrorism. Giulio’s mom won’t ever see him again and we will never read his doctoral research on Egypt’s trade unions, but no one cares because we are supposedly safer with a dictator just few kilometres away from Europe’s southern borders than with a brilliant student on our side. 
 
The question then appears quite simple; can we, as Europeans, as humans, forget the death of a student, one of us, in the name of the most ruthless cynicism? The answer for me and for other 60 million of Giulio’s compatriots is quite clear, it’s a NO as big as the hope we preserve in our inner soul for a better future for any human being in this world. TMM

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The end of the road for Moto GP?

11/9/2015

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Images like this one might soon become a rare sight // Ph: Jay Clark - Flickr
Sport This Sunday's win by Jorge Lorenzo over Valentino Rossi could be the beginning of the end for the beloved motorcycle circuit. We explain you why
Edoardo Tricerri

As I put aside the assignments that were scarily approaching deadlines, I was already aware of the mistake I was making. Yet, punctual as I’ve never been to a lecture, I sat down in front of the TV ready to watch the Grand Finale of the 2015 MotoGP season. In the breath-taking moments before the start I should have been more rational, conscious of the fact that just a miracle could have changed the ending of an already written tale. Yet, as my heartbeat was reverberating in the empty room, passion and excitement didn’t let me. Maybe it was because starting from last and finishing in the top two seemed a doable task for the greatest racer in history, or maybe it was the excitement that a possible great feat always generates, but as I switched on my TV, I really believed Valentino Rossi could make an historical exploit.
 
And Valentino almost did the impossible, starting last he finished the race in fourth place, passing other 23 racers, and just falling short of the podium. Unfortunately though, his great efforts and an amazing race did not pay off in the end. Jorge Lorenzo won the championship—as he later admitted—thanks to Marc Marquez, who safely escorted him to the finish line.
 
There are a lot of questions about this season that would deserve to be answered by Marquez. Why did he fight as a lion in Malaysia, passing Rossi ten times in a lap, yet yesterday he didn’t even try to make a move on Lorenzo for 30 laps? Why so much hate for a legend that made the history of this sport and that at 35 years is still able to compete with younger racers that were barely born when he won his first championship? Why did he betray values of sportsmanship and honesty deciding that it was up to him to decide who deserved to win the title?

From now on MotoGP will be open to speculation, conspiracy theories and assumptions of corruption, making it so similar to other sports they tried to differentiate it from
As I’m afraid these questions will never be answered, it is undoubtable that MotoGP will never be the same. The awareness that each racer was willing to do anything to win regardless of whom was in front of him, constant unbelievable passes and thrilling endings attracted millions and millions of fans to this sport, and now Marquez has deprived it of all of this. From now on MotoGP will be open to speculations, conspiracy theories and alleged assumptions of corruption, making it so similar to other sports they tried to differentiate it from.
 
 Marquez is an amazing competitor, he’s young and has a bright future ahead of him. I wish him the best. I wish him one day to be as old as Valentino and find himself competing for the title in a last race where he fights with a much younger racer, as Rossi did yesterday. I really hope that when that day comes he will find a loyal and sportsman opponent and that he will be able to fairly beat him. As he goes through empty stands without anybody cheering for him, he will understand what he did to this sport.
 
Valentino Rossi lost yesterday, but so did MotoGP.
TMM
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Migrants and Italy: a forgotten story

10/25/2015

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Migrants arrive in the Italian Island of Lampedusa // Ph: Noborder Network @ Flickr
Analysis What might have been a sudden and undesired issue for bureaucratic Europe, had already been experienced for several years along the Italian borders

Edoardo Tricerri

In a European Union engrossed in debating financial regulations, arguing over repayments of debt and far detached from the real world, the refugee crisis materialised as an apparently unpredictable and unexpected emergency. However, what might have been a sudden and undesired issue for bureaucratic Europe, had already been experienced for several years by a country that repeatedly urged for a common European strategy to tackle immigration: Italy.

Since the beginning of the millennium, countless people escaping from wars and economic depression have faced extreme journeys to reach Italy’s shores, seen as a safe haven to start over a new life in prosperous and welcoming Europe. Yet, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), over 22,000 migrants died in the Mediterranean between 2000 and 2014, making the route from Libya to Lampedusa the deadliest migrant route in the world.  Such figures, however, cannot be blamed only on loathsome human traffickers, but should equally be attributed to the lack of a cohesive European response to support Italy in search and rescue operations.

Due to its geographical location, with the island of Lampedusa being closer to Africa than to the Italian shores, throughout the years Italy witnessed a growing number of migrants arriving to its coast.  With the outbreak of the Libyan civil war, the arrivals rapidly intensified and so did the casualties, escalating to horrific tragedies such as the Lampedusa shipwreck of October 2013. In that occasion, a boat carrying migrants from Libya to Italy sank off the island with more than 360 deaths reported.

The collective efforts of European countries to jointly face the migrant crisis, combined with the Italian decision to help without resentment, lay the bases for a new Europe.
The gravity of the event led the Italian government to establish “Operation Mare Nostrum”, a large-scale naval operation that involved search and rescue, with migrants brought aboard naval assault ships. The Italian government, which at the time was experiencing one of the harshest recessions in the history of the country, sought financial aid from the EU to fund the mission, yet only negative responses with poor justifications were received. Specifically, the UK government cited fears that the operation was acting as "an unintended 'pull factor', encouraging more migrants to attempt the dangerous sea crossing”.

Just a few months after the tragedy, the German government protested against Italy claiming that the money handed to refugees—each asylum seeker was given 500 euros to afford first necessity goods—was being spent in train tickets to reach Germany. Thus, the Bavarian federal minister of the interior demanded that Italy would take back all the migrants that had reached Germany. The Italian government without objections agreed to do so.

In 2014, a year after its launch, Italy ended “Operation Mare Nostrum”, citing costs too large for one EU state alone to manage. In response to Rome and NGOs’ demands to keep monitoring the Mediterranean, the European Union introduced “Operation Triton”. Nevertheless, rather than replicating the Italian mission, which carried out proactive search and rescue across 27,000 square miles of sea, Triton focused on border surveillance and operated only within 30 miles of the Italian coast with a budget of less than a third than that of its predecessor.

This chronological excursus brings us to summer 2015, when the arrivals at Lampedusa became unbearable for Italy. Despite being sadly used to tragedies, the enormous amount of deaths—more than 2,000 people had drowned since the beginning of the year—became an intolerable burden for the Italian government. In such a contest of misery and mortality, the Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi once again called for European common measures to tackle immigration.

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Italian PM Matteo Renzi is at the forefront of the crisis // Ph: Francesco Pierantoni @ Flickr
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Trouble in the Mediterranean // Ph: US Navy

In an article for The Guardian, Mr Renzi stated: “Today’s problem isn’t about Italy facing this emergency alone. An EU-wide response is needed by Europe far more than it is needed by Italy.  It’s Europe that needs to demonstrate the values it believes in and stands for”.

Recent news is that the EU has forced through a deal to impose refugee quotas, sharing 120,000 people between most of its member states. After years of complaints, demands and threats the Italian government finally sees its wishes come true. Ironically, after the deal was passed, Germany—the same country that in 2013 forced Rome to take back its migrants—asked for Italy’s help in monitoring the border between the two countries. Once again, the Italian government without objections agreed to do so by implementing frontier security checks.

The collective efforts of European countries to jointly face the migrant crisis, combined with the Italian decision to help without resentment, lay the bases for a new Europe. A new Europe based not on bond spreads and stability pacts, but rather on values of civility and peace. A Europe in which Italy can for once be a positive example. TMM

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    features by

    All
    Aaron Zitnik
    Andras Stefanovszky
    Antonio Rolo Duarte
    Candice Chau
    Clara Maure
    Corina Motofeanu
    Dominique Wong
    Edoardo Tricerri
    Georgiana Baciu
    Hugh Wright
    Jake Hampson
    Jeanmiguel Uva
    Jonathan Mason
    Jyotsna Mehra
    Kirstine Rysbjerg Munk
    Lioui Benhamou
    Marcus Jairus
    Melody Sim
    Richard Bolton
    Ryan Khurana
    Samuel Lindblad
    Tyler Bryce

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