by James Corbett

TheInternationalForecaster.com

December 6, 2016

The scene is becoming familiar, even if the actors change from stage to stage: A political establishment is overturned by a wave of populist anger. Markets panic and a sell-off looks imminent. And then…things stabilize. The government changes, but life carries on.

The latest version of this performance is taking place in Italy where Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has just been unseated after Italians overwhelmingly voted “No” on a constitutional referendum upon which Renzi had staked his political career. The proposed law would have made a series of changes to the composition of Italy’s government, but it was not the technicalities of the proposed changes themselves that motivated over 65% of registered Italian voters to the public, and it was not some great interest in the composition and role of the Italian senate that led 59% of those voters to reject the new rules. Instead, this was seen as a referendum on Renzi and the political status quo in Italy itself.

Renzi’s loss is the end of Renzi’s brief (but not so brief by Italian standards) tenure as prime minister. It is also a blow to the EUrocats in Brussels, who were hoping that the notoriously recalcitrant Italian public might be persuaded to engage in some mild political reform as an entree to more EU-friendly reforms in the future.

But the vote is a win for Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement, a non-party party that has ridden a wave of populist support, going from a joked about internet-only phenomenon at its founding in 2009 to a growing force in Italian politics today. This is also bad for the EU as both the Five Star Movement and the Lega Nord, an anti-immigration party that also helped spearhead the “No” vote, are very much anti-EU, as demonstrated by their support for withdrawing Italy from the eurozone and for re-issuing the lira.

Market response to the fall of Renzi’s government and the rise of chaos should be familiar to those who watched the same reactions post-Brexit and post-Trump. Markets panicked and sold off, with the euro hitting a 2-year low as the results poured in, with signs that the contagion would spread to stocks as the exchanges opened Monday morning…

…But then, as with Brexit and Trump, the sky failed to fall, and the doom-and-gloomers were left scratching their heads. After Italy’s FTSI MIB index tumbled 2.0 points on the news and bonds rose slightly, quickly began exploding back upward. Even Italy’s banking sector — though still in a precarious situation — staged a comeback on the Milan exchange.

In reality, none of these numbers are important. These markets are responding to perceptions and fancies, not facts, and the fact is that there’s no clear sign yet of what this means for Italy’s political future, for its banking crisis, or for anything else.

What is clear is that yet another populist movement is knocking on the doors of power and preparing to overturn the status quo. The roots of the Italian people’s anger with the EUrocrats can be traced back to the so-called “PIIGS” disgust at the treatment of Greece during the first bailout “negotiations” in 2010 and the silent coup that parachuted Goldman banker and Bilderberger extraordinaire Mario Monti into the prime minister’s office in 2011 as a sort of fait accompli by Brussels. The Italian people are increasingly fed up with the dictates of the EU and are looking to shake up a political, business and banking establishment that has thoroughly failed them and left their country teetering on a fiscal precipice.

Tellingly, the Five Star Movement has now entered the crosshairs of the same establishment media that brought its guns to bear on the Brexiteers and the Trumpeters. Just as Trump’s election was brought to you by #FakeNews and Kremlin propaganda, so has Buzzfeed just written an article blaming Grillo’s surging Five Star Movement’s success on…you guessed it, “Fake News and Kremlin propaganda“! Hey, if the talking points work, why not use them again (and again and again and again and again)?

It’s still too early to know how this will play out politically, or even when an election is likely to be called. Some pundits posit that a snap election will be called, sending Italians heading to the polls right away; others suggest the election will wait until February. As Bloomberg notes in its own hit piece on Grillo, this biding of time may be necessary to give the establishment time to rig the election against the Five Star Movement:

“The current electoral law automatically gives bonus seats to the leading party in the lower house, to boost stability. That’s spooking mainstream parties, which plan to get together and change the rules before Five Star can benefit in the next election. If the next set of rules favors coalitions rather than individual parties, Five Star may struggle to find the allies required to control the legislature.”

Whatever the case, Europe continues to be pulled apart at the seams even as it keeps reaching toward total centralization. This weekend’s referendum results have only added to that tension.

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