Book
Review: Berlusconi: The Epic Story of the
Billionaire Who Took Over Italy
By Alan
Friedman
Ask anyone
about famous Italians and odds are that they will scratch their head and answer
Julius Caesar and Silvio Berlusconi. No other living Italian has played such a
prominent role in shaping the future of the country as Berlusconi has. Every
Italian seems to have an opinion of Silvio Berlusconi, he is a man you either
admire or detest, his larger than life character making indifference all but impossible.
Berlusconi is not an official biography, but when the man
himself was approached by Alan Friedman, he agreed to be interviewed and open
his private archives. Nearing the end of a long and eventful life, Berlusconi
obviously feels the need to tell his life´s story with his own words, which
seems entirely reasonable given all the rumors about his personal life and
allegations of corruption that has dogged him for many decades. However, and
Friedman is astute enough to not play softball with the old man. Berlusconi touches upon all the scandals,
corruption and sensationalism that one might wish to hear about, and charts the
Milanese businessman’s unlikely rise from humble beginnings.
Born into a
working class Milanese family in 1936, Silvio Berlusconi’s fortune is very much
self-made, his father was a bank teller and his mother a housewife. During
Silvio’s early years, the second world war was raging in Europe. When the
allies bombed German held Milan in 1943, Silvio and his family were forced to
flee the city and briefly lived in the Swiss countryside. When the war ended,
the Berlusconi family returned to Milan and Silvio resumed his studies. He
eventually studied law at the university of Milan, where he graduated in 1961.
Berlusconi was a bright young man with plenty of drive and ambition, but most
importantly he was, as he frequently informs Mr. Friedman, “the most handsome
guy on the beach”. He had a passion for music and started a band with some of
his friends, which eventually led to Berlusconi working as a cruise ship
crooner, singing jazz songs and serenading the passengers every evening. He
worked long hours, something he didn´t seem to mind since he enjoyed what he
was doing and was popular among guests as well as the staff. One of his band
members from those days, Federico Gonfalonieri remains a business associate and
close friend.
The life of
a cruise ship crooner wasn´t enough for Berlusconi, who was soon drawn to the
construction industry. During the nineteen sixties the Italian economy was
witnessing a post war boom. Salaries for ordinary people were rising steadily,
the economy was robust and there was great demand for housing. A natural
dealmaker and salesman, Berlusconi wanted in on the action. Using his family
connections, his father having risen from a humble bank teller to one of the
managing directors of the small Banca Rasini, Berlusconi was able to attract
financiers for buying and developing a plot of land in central Milan.
Berlusconi was adept at utilizing the contacts at his disposal, and since there
was a boom going on it wasn´t too difficult to attract buyers and investors.
Berlusconi´s meagre budget meant that he employed friends and relatives to work
on the development while he himself worked long hours fulfilling a plethora of
roles ranging from entrepreneur, architect, construction foreman and salesman.
The development project went well and, buoyed by his success, Berlusconi soon
set about grander property schemes as his fame and wealth grew.
When the
property market collapsed in 1963, the young developer ran into serious
trouble. It is a testament to Berlusconi´s skill as a dealmaker and his solid
work ethic that he managed to pull off his biggest deal yet in this adversarial
climate. Unable to find any individual buyers for the apartment complex he was
developing on the outskirts of Milan, Berlusconi got the idea to try and
convince a pension fund to buy the whole development. The board, which finally
relented and travelled all the way from Rome view the construction site, made
no secret of their reluctance to close the deal. Like a young Napoleon
requisitioning canons from hundreds of miles away in order to batter down the
enemy’s fortifications at the siege of Toulon, Silvio pulled out all the stops
to beautify his construction site and woo the pension fund’s board members. He
had birch trees shipped in from Holland and uprooted an entire lawn he had
bought from Salesian monks. Family members were press ganged into volunteering
whatever furniture they could spare in order to furnish the display apartments.
When one holdout director was blocking the sale, Berlusconi was able to charm
his secretary and ask her to book passage on the midnight train from Rome to
Milan that her boss was going to travel on. Hiding behind a newspaper,
Berlusconi waited until the hapless board-member was seated next to him, before
he pounced. During the hours that followed he succeeded in persuading him to
invest in the development, and they parted amicably as best of friends. Faced
with adversity, Berlusconi had at last come through in spectacular fashion.
Throughout his life he has remained steadfast in his belief that he can
convince anyone of anything as long as he can get face to face with them and
deploy his charm, something he tried to do many years later when George W. Bush
geared up for the invasion of Iraq. His flair for the theatrical, for setting
the stage where his showmanship and razzmatazz comes into full bloom, can be
traced from the real estate development he tried to beautify all the way to the
2002 NATO summit in Italy and frequent meetings with Muammar Gadhafi in his
Bedouin tent, where the two leaders used to happily pose before the cameras.
Before
Berlusconi entered the scene and shook things up, Italian television was
dominated by Rai, the staid and conservative government owned network. At
midnight all broadcasting ceased and viewers would be shown a test card with
the occasional loud beep to remind them to turn off their TV-sets. Television
was considered a public good that the state provided to its citizens, and what
little advertising Rai showed was discreet and toned down, and didn´t increase
sales for the products they showed in any measurable way. Berlusconi explains
to Mr. Friedman that watching those ads was like pissing in your pants, “You
get a kind of warm sense of well-being, but nobody notices anything”. Naturally,
this uncharted territory, where no media executive had gone before, beckoned
Berlusconi like a siren’s call. Establishing himself in the labyrinthine and
often corrupt world of Italian media, starting on a small scale in his native
Milan, Berlusconi’s media empire grew rapidly. Spearheaded by his flagship
channel, Canale 5, Silvio Berlusconi soon became the new face of Italian
television. Before they knew what hit them, the Italians were treated to
American movies and sitcoms, interspersed with glitzy ads for all kinds of
consumer products. Knowing his audience well, Berlusconi’s flagships shows
featured scantily dressed ladies dancing to the latest pop music as well as
bawdy- working class humor. Having been shown something they didn’t know that
they wanted, the Italian people quickly acquired a taste for ostentatious Berlusconi-style
entertainment. Italy’s intellectual community complained about superficial
consumerism, but now that the genie was out of the bottle it proved impossible
to put it back in. Berlusconi’s successes meant that he was a national
celebrity as well as one of the richest men in Italy.
The latter
he proved beyond doubt by buying the Ac Milan football team in 1986. As a young
boy, he used to talk football with his father when he returned home from work
each night, now Berlusconi owned team that both he and his father had always
loved. Over the years Berlusconi hired a number of successful coaches and
helped lead Milan to several Champions League victories.
During the
early nineteen nineties, Italy’s political establishment was rocked by a series
of corruption scandals that upended the established political order. Into this
power vacuum stepped the billionaire tycoon turned politician Silvio
Berlusconi, with his newly founded Forza Italia Party. Berlusconi himself says
that he feared for Italy if the communist party took power, which looked likely
after the Christian Democrats, their main opposition, had imploded. The
communists had at this point changed their name to the Democratic Party of the
Left, but that did little to assuage Berlusconi’s fears. Forza Italia’s
aggressive marketing and center right policies caught the public mood, no doubt
Berlusconi’s TV channels had helped grease the skids, and in 1994 Silvio
Berlusconi was elected president of Italy. However, his first tenure in office
turned out to be short lived, after allegations of corruption, he was forced to
resign the following year. All in all, Berlusconi served as Italy’s president
on three occasions, 1994-95, 2001-06 and 2008-11. His days as a business tycoon
were marred by allegations of corruption, which got steadily worse after he
entered politics. His detractors say that Berlusconi only entered the political
arena in order to dismiss cases filed against him and rig the judicial system,
and that he has consistently strived so subvert the Italian judiciary. When
Friedman touches on these issues, Berlusconi becomes irritated and tight
lipped, yet he insists that all his life he has been subjected to a consistent
campaign by communist forces to bring himself, his party and his businesses to
ruin. Presumably so that Rai could get back to the business of showing twenty
minute commercials where you didn’t know what product was being
advertised.
If what
Berlusconi says is true, the Italian left has waged a consistent and incredibly
effective campaign to plant false evidence and defame Berlusconi over the
course of many decades. If his opponents truly were that crafty one wonders why
they have consistently been unable to win an election and hang on to the reigns
of government. The chance that Berlusconi is innocent of all the charges that
have been levied against him over the years seems slim at best, yet it is
undeniably so that Italy’s left wing has steadfastly opposed him on ideological
grounds.
The charges
of corruption aside, what we do know is that Berlusconi didn’t succeed in
unifying Italy, and failed to deliver the structural reforms he promised. No
matter where you stand on the political spectrum, the Berlusconi legacy is one
rich with bombast but short on substance. Italy today faces many problems,
among others a potential banking crisis that has economists in the EU deeply
worried, problems that grew worse or weren’t addressed properly during
Berlusconi’s three terms in office. At the same time, Berlusconi can’t take the
blame for all of Italy’s problems, the country has long had an unstable climate
where governments that try to enact reforms are short lived. He certainly found
himself addressing wobbly coalitions with all the staying power of wet
cardboard and tried to do what was right from his perspective, even if that
meant enacting legislation that helped his businesses.
During his
time in office Berlusconi made some interesting friends, and to this day talks
glowingly about his relationship with Vladimir Putin. During the early 2000s
Berlusconi acted as a useful conduit between east and west, maintaining close
relationships with the Bush administration as well as with the Kremlin. One
glaring failure is, however, his inability to dissuade Bush from invading Iraq,
something he tried to do but may in hindsight have been a pointless exercise.
Another great friend was Libya’s Muammar Gadaffi, a colorful autocrat who
travelled with a retinue of female bodyguards and lived in a grand Bedouin tent
whenever he visited foreign leaders. The intervention in Libya pitted Berlusconi
against his nemesis, former French president Nicholas Sarkozy. He viewed Sarkozy
as trying to thwart Italian interests in Libya, and after Gadaffi was ousted his
country’s investments in the desert country plummeted. Italy’s eastern ties,
however, still remain. The country was reluctant to launch sanctions against
Russia after the annexation of Ukraine and still imports large amounts of
Russian oil and natural gas.
During the
Eurozone crisis, Italy’s economy was on the rocks, and Berlusconi’s enemies saw
a chance to get rid of him at last. When Sarkozy loyalist and former French
finance minister Christine Lagarde was named the new head of the IMF,
Berlusconi came under intense pressure. Despite his best efforts, the new
American president, Barack Obama, didn’t find him all that simpatico either. Some
frantic political maneuvering notwithstanding, Berlusconi was forced to resign
in 2011. Reading between the lines, Berlusconi seems to have felt misunderstood
by boring stiffs like Obama and Lagarde, the latter of whom visibly baulked when
he tried telling her some of his bawdy jokes. Despite his age and his
inglorious departure from office, however, Berlusconi still harbors political
ambitions and remains a force to be reckoned with in Italian politics.
Alan
Friedman does an excellent job of telling the unlikely story of Berlusconi’s
rise to become Italy’s most powerful man as well as his eventual downfall.
Berlusconi’s own words lends credence to the story but, as Friedman himself
admits, he’s not entirely sure who the real Berlusconi is. He is certainly
someone who has a showman’s mentality who wants you to like him, no matter what
room he is in, but getting at the real Berlusconi seems like a fruitless
exercise. You get the feeling that the lengthy audience Freidman is granted to
Berlusconi’s manor home is an attempt to burnish his tarred image, possibly for
a political comeback, and that he is whoever he thinks he needs to be in order
to get what he wants from you. All in all, Berlusconi
is an excellent autobiography and a highly illuminating read if you are
interested in current events and European politics, but who the real man is
beneath all the bluster and Bunga-Bunga remains a mystery.
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