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You are right, it would be interesting to document B's all out war on the judiciary and how he managed to turn the tide in public opinion from a nearly unanimous approval rating during mani puliti to a certain disenchantment, fortunately not majoritarian. Berlusconi's monopoly of prime time and lunch time television is largely responsible. For years Vittorio Sgarbi screamed insults and calumny on judges at lunch time. B has a state-of-the-arts spin-and-smear machine that is comparatively far more powerful than anything Rove could dream of.
by de Gondi (publiobestia aaaatttthotmaildaughtusual) on Fri Jan 13th, 2006 at 08:07:38 AM EST
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Wikipedia: Statutory Term Strategy [against] Mani Pulite
After Berlusconi's victory in 2001, the gradual campaign against judges reached the point where it is not only openly acceptable to criticize judges for having carried out Mani pulite, but it has become increasingly difficult to broadcast opinions favorable to Milan's pool. This is an impressive 180° cultural turn from 1992, when no politician was believed and no judge was contested, in which the Berlusconi's power in media has undoubtedly played an important role. Even Umberto Bossi, whose Lega Nord once made a statement bringing and showing a hanging rope in a parliamentary session, has become highly critical of judges, even though there are still occasional frictions between Lega Nord and former Christian Democrat or Socialist allies in Berlusconi's coalition.
You say "a certain disenchantment, fortunately not majoritarian". How bad is it, really?

guaranteed to evoke a violent reaction from police is to challenge their right to "define the situation." --- David Graeber citing Marc Cooper
by Migeru (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Fri Jan 13th, 2006 at 08:11:57 AM EST
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I think that B's rightwing coalition has a hard time keeping the lid on their anti-judiciary spin. The so-called "girotondo" movement of the past few years demonstrated that large sectors of the population defend and approve of the judiciary. The justice and legality movements do get their message across despite negative media coverage and news blackouts on their activity. There was a
poll
conducted in 2004 which shows that opinions about the judiciary are not as B's propaganda would have it.

There are two "souls" to the judiciary problem. It is a social norm to distrust justice in Italy by large sectors of the population. This dates back decades. The Italian judiciary system has historically been slow and Byzantine, often condemned by the Hague and Human Rights organizations such as Amnesty International. It's however important to note that the fault lies primarily at the feet of parliament and politicians who are ultimately responsible for judiciary reform and law. Judges apply laws and legal norms, they don't make them. Yet they take the flack unjustly.

Berlusconi's strategy was to graft his personal problems, as well as those of his referents, onto pre-existing discontent. In a way it's a mimicry tactic that worked for a while.

by de Gondi (publiobestia aaaatttthotmaildaughtusual) on Fri Jan 13th, 2006 at 09:37:36 AM EST
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