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Encyclopedia > Tangentopoli
Bettino Craxi, viewed by many as the symbol of Tangentopoli, leader of the Italian Socialist Party, is greeted by a salvo of coins as a sign of loathing by protesters contesting him.
Bettino Craxi, viewed by many as the symbol of Tangentopoli, leader of the Italian Socialist Party, is greeted by a salvo of coins as a sign of loathing by protesters contesting him.

Tangentopoli (Italian for bribeville) was the name used to indicate the corruption-based system that dominated Italy until the Mani pulite investigation delivered it a deadly blow in 1992. Whether things have really changed since then, or whether only the names of those involved have, is a matter of debate. Image File history File links Craxi_coins. ... Image File history File links Craxi_coins. ... Bettino Craxi Bettino Craxi (born Benedetto Craxi in Milan, Italy on February 24, 1934, died in Hammamet on January 19, 2000) was an Italian politician. ... Bettino Craxi, longtime secretary of the party and for many a symbol of corruption. ... Mani pulite (Italian for clean hands) was a nationwide Italian police investigation into political corruption held in the 1990s, following the scandal of Banco Ambrosiano in 1982, which implicated mafia, Vatican Bank and P2. ... 1992 (MCMXCII) was a leap year starting on Wednesday. ...

Contents


Popular Distrust of Politics

As a general attitude, but especially in the 80s and early 90s, Italians have often been sceptical of their own politicians. It is a common attitude throughout the country to consider the state inefficient, corruption widespread, success to be based most of the time on personal acquaintances rather than merit. While these claims are somewhat simplistic generalizations, they were probably not such a bad approximation of the real picture.


Rich Friars and poor monasteries

It was often observed that, while political parties (especially government members) were in a perennial state of need of money to organize their activities, many politicians were leading lifestyles well beyond what they could have afforded. The powerful secretary of the Italian Socialist Party, Bettino Craxi, is often taken as a typical example, since he had a permanent residence in an expensive hotel in Rome's centre and also owned a villa in Hammamet, Tunisia. Few pictures exist of the villa, and reports range from it being described as a castle with an 18-hole golf course to a relatively modest seaside villa. In any case, this lifestyle should have been beyond his means. Bettino Craxi, longtime secretary of the party and for many a symbol of corruption. ... Bettino Craxi Bettino Craxi (born Benedetto Craxi in Milan, Italy on February 24, 1934, died in Hammamet on January 19, 2000) was an Italian politician. ... City motto: Senatus Populusque Romanus – SPQR (The Senate and the People of Rome) Founded 21 April753 BC mythical, 1st millennium BC Region Latium Mayor Walter Veltroni (Left-Wing Democrats) Area  - City Proper  1285 km² Population  - City (2004)  - Metropolitan  - Density (city proper) 2,553,873 almost 4,300,000 1. ... Hammamet is a town in Tunisia which due to its beatches is a well-loved location for swimming and was the first tourist destination in Tunisia. ...


Another member of the Italian Socialist Party, Rino Formica, once made a statement that remains proverbial: The friars are rich, but the monastery is poor. Bettino Craxi, longtime secretary of the party and for many a symbol of corruption. ...


Recommendations

It was obvious that careers in state conglomerates, especially public television RAI, were likely to be influenced more by personal acquaintances than by competence. A popular saying may be translated as: "It does not matter what you know, it matters whom you know". Again, one of the most blatant cases was Bettino Craxi's mistress, Sandra Milo, making an impressive career in state television during the 1980s. RAI (Radiotelevisione Italiana) is the Italian public service broadcaster. ...


Lottizzazione

The term lottizzazione, meaning the way a terrain is divided up in minor parts or lotti, came to indicate the procedure of awarding guidance of such important state conglomerates as IRI, ENEL or ENI to political figures, or at least managers with a clear political orientation. This usually trickled down to lower levels, creating power centres depending on political parties that controlled a significant part of the production system. Iksan is a city and major railway junction in North Jeolla Province, South Korea. ... Enel, is an common mistranslation of the name Eneru, a fictional villain from the manga and anime series known as One Piece. Enel SpA is a 60 percent state controlled electricity company in Italy. ... Ente nazionale idrocarburi http://fr. ...


The available seats were usually awarded so that government parties (and, in some occasions, opposition parties like the Italian Communist Party) would get a share of power corresponding to their perceived influence in the government. Most people suspected that this "market" could hide less-than-clear interests, and also be a way to illegally accumulate capital by means of corruption and mismanagement. Sadly, the investigations of the early '90s proved these suspicions to be mostly true. The Partito Comunista Italiano (PCI) or Italian Communist Party emerged as Partito Comunista dItalia or Communist Party of Italy from a secession by the Leninist comunisti puri tendency from the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) during that bodys congress on 21 January 1921 at Livorno. ...


The Cencelli Manual

When forming a government, a set of rules, often dubbed Manuale Cencelli from the name of a politician particularly good at this, used to be applied. Governing parties received ministries and charges (collectively dubbed as seats) according to their electoral weight. Some seats were less important than others (e.g., the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was more important than the Ministry of the Environment). Some were permanently linked to a party, like the Ministry of Internal Affairs which was always appointed to a member of the Democrazia Cristiana from 1948 to 1994. Furthermore, minor parties, like the Italian Socialist Democratic Party, the Italian Liberal Party and the Italian Republican Party, could often leverage their decisive contributition to attaining a parliamentary majority in order to be over-represented in terms of distributed seats. Christian Democracy, (Democrazia Cristiana), the christian democratic party of Italy, commonly called the democristiani or DC, dominated government for nearly half a century until its demise amid a welter of corruption allegations in 1992-94. ... 1948 (MCMXLVIII) was a leap year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 1948 calendar). ... 1994 (MCMXCIV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International year of the Family. ... The Italian Social Democratic Party (Italian: Partito Socialista Democratico Italiano, often shortened to , PSDI) was founded in 1952 by the union of two parties: the Unitarian Socialist Party and the Workers Socialist Party. ... The Italian Liberal Party (Italian: Partito Liberale Italiano, PLI) was an Italian free market liberal party. ... The Italian Republican Party (Partito Repubblicano Italiano) is an old left liberal party in Italy, with roots to Giuseppe Mazzini. ...


This system resulted in a long series of incompetent ministers in many areas, who received their "seat" only because the Cencelli system calculated there was a gap to fill for a certain party. Among the least pleasantly remembered figures are: Paolo Cirino Pomicino, Minister of Balance, who lacked economic competence and was later sentenced on corruption charges; Francesco De Lorenzo, who was later found to be one of the most corrupt ministers of Public Health ever to take charge; and Giovanni Prandini, for similar reasons immediately dubbed Prendini (from the Italian prendere, "to take"). Paolo Cirino Pomicino Paolo Cirino Pomicino (born on 3 September 1939 in Napoli) is a Italian politician and Member of the European Parliament for Southern with the Popular Alliance-UDEUR, part of the European Peoples Party and sits on the European Parliaments Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs. ...


A Stable Instability

Looking at the list of Italian prime ministers since the end of the War, it is evident that most governments were short-lived, lasting 11 months on average. The shortest of them lasted just three days. This is a list of Prime Ministers of Italy. ... Mushroom cloud from the nuclear explosion over Nagasaki rising 18 km into the air. ...


All the Italian parties had large memberships (the Communists more than two million until 1956, the Christian Democrats almost the same by the early 1970s), recruited from organizations such as Catholic Action, cooperatives, and trade unions. These organizations often provided tangible benefits—jobs, disability pensions, and cheap holidays—to their members. Most parties except the Communists were groupings of organized “factions,” each with its own leaders, deputies, regional or ideological base, sources of finance, and journals. Within each party, the factions contended for power and for control of wealthy firms and agencies in the public sector in order to secure financial backing and jobs for supporters. This was the essential reason why governments between 1945–94 were short-lived: governments had to be reshuffled regularly in order to allow different faction leaders to obtain posts. Government instability was encouraged by secret voting in Parliament, which enabled deputies from dissatisfied factions within the coalition parties to bring down governments without attracting blame. However, instability was often more apparent than real—the key government posts were often held semi-permanently by top politicians—and it was mitigated by the secretaries of the leading parties, whose role it was to negotiate acceptable deals among faction leaders. Indeed, to be a party secretary was sometimes more significant than to be prime minister, since the latter had no direct mandate from the electorate and was often not even the most prominent member of a party.


This is often cited as a sign of Italian political instability, but in fact throughout this period the parliamentary majority remained much the same, with the Democrazia Cristiana being the largest party, and the only change worth noting being the entrance of the Socialists in the government during the 1960s. The system was known as "imperfect bipolarism", as it was impossible for the only major opposition party, the Communists, to gain control of a NATO country. This was in contrast with most European democracies, as France, Germany and the United Kingdom, where left-wing and right-wing alternated to power. Christian Democracy, (Democrazia Cristiana), the christian democratic party of Italy, commonly called the democristiani or DC, dominated government for nearly half a century until its demise amid a welter of corruption allegations in 1992-94. ... The NATO flag NATO 2002 Summit in Prague The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), also called the North Atlantic Alliance, the Atlantic Alliance or the Western Alliance, is an international organisation for collective security established in 1949, in support of the North Atlantic Treaty signed in Washington, DC, on 4... World map showing Europe Europe is conventionally considered one of the seven continents of Earth which, in this case, is more a cultural and political distinction than a physiogeographic one. ...


Nominally, Italy was ruled by a center, or center-left coalition, but this denomination ignores the fact that the main opposition was in fact on the left of the government; to the right of it, there was only the fascist Movimento Sociale Italiano, guided for a long time by World-War-II criminal Giorgio Almirante, who was "exiled" from democratic life. In practice, the Democrazia Cristiana was the party collecting most right-wing votes, even though its orientation was initially defined as a centre party looking to the left. The fascist past after the War also made the term "right-wing" too susceptible of associations with fascism, and it was therefore avoided. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... The Italian Social Movement (Movimento Sociale Italiano) (MSI) was a neo-Fascist party formed in the post-World War II period by supporters of the executed dictator Benito Mussolini. ... Giorgio Almirante (1914-1988) was the founder and leader of the Italian Social Movement until his retirement in 1987. ...


Much of the government changes were actually adjustments, often based on the Cencelli manual, made after some events had changed the political scenario: typically, a large local election might indicate that some parties or some individual figures had increased their power, and could therefore require more government seats; this would however reduce someone else's share, and a delicate balance had to be struck. Negotiations for the formation of a new cabinet could take months, and given the short duration of these cabinets talks for the formation of the next one could sometimes be their main activity.


However, the uninterrupted presence in power of many powerful and less powerful politicians undoubtedly contributed to the rise of a political class that did not have much consideration of popular opinion, as they were confident that the majority would not vote for the Communists anyway. The feeling of invulnerability and impunity was broken in 1992, when the Mani Pulite investigation began. It is curious that it happened one year after the collapse of the Soviet Union, possibly when the citizens did not consider it necessary anymore to have some politicians in charge only on the grounds that they were anti-communists. Mani pulite (Italian for clean hands) was a nationwide Italian police investigation into political corruption held in the 1990s, following the scandal of Banco Ambrosiano in 1982, which implicated mafia, Vatican Bank and P2. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Money and Politics, Italian Style - Social and Economic Policy - Global Policy Forum (982 words)
During the same period, a crowd of 40,000 Italians gathered recently in Milan to remember the 10th anniversary of Tangentopoli (Bribesville) - an astonishing revelation of corruption in Italian politics.
Tangentopoli is the key to understanding the type of system which later brought shame on such European politicians as François Mitterand, Helmut Kohl, and Jacques Chirac.
Yes, there is a common impression in Italy that the systematic corruption that led the country into Tangentopoli is greatly diminished.
Tangentopoli - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1313 words)
Bettino Craxi, viewed by many as the symbol of Tangentopoli, leader of the Italian Socialist Party, is greeted by a salvo of coins as a sign of loath by protesters contesting him.
Tangentopoli (Italian for bribeville) was the name used to indicate the corruption-based system that dominated Italy until the Mani pulite investigation delivered it a deadly blow in 1992.
Licio Gelli, the infamous headmaster of Propaganda Due (aka "P2") outlawed masonic lodge, was a main character of this scandal, as of the Banco Ambrosiano krach scandal and the Gladio NATO clandestine structure, which engaged itself in domestic terror during Italy's strategy of tension in the 1970s-80s.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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