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  • 20
    hours
    ago

    'Ruby the Heart Stealer' on witness stand: Berlusconi parties featured stripping 'nuns'

    Stefano Porta / ANSA via EPA

    Karima El-Mahrough, nicknamed Ruby the Heart Stealer, leaves a Milan courtroom after testifying about former premier Silvio Berlusconi's "bunga bunga" parties.

    By Colleen Barry, The Associated Press

    MILAN -- The Moroccan woman at the center of a sex scandal involving former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi testified Friday in court for the first time, describing how a young woman attending one of Berlusconi's "bunga bunga" parties dressed as a nun, danced provocatively and stripped down to her underwear for the premier.

    Karima el-Mahroug took the witness stand in the trial of three former Berlusconi aides charged with recruiting her and other women for prostitution. They deny the charges. The trial is separate from the one in which Berlusconi is charged with paying for sex with a minor — el-Mahroug herself — and trying to cover it up.

    El-Mahroug, also known as Ruby or Ruby the Heart Stealer, has made carefully orchestrated statements to the media since the scandal broke but has never publicly given sworn testimony. Both she and Berlusconi deny having had sex.

    The three Berlusconi aides — Emilio Fede, an executive in Berlusconi's media empire; Nicole Minetti, a former dental hygienist, showgirl and local politician, and talent agent Dario "Lele" Mora — are accused of recruiting women for prostitution at the parties and abetting prostitution, including of a minor.

    El-Mahroug's testimony Friday confirmed the sexual atmosphere at Berlusconi's infamous "bunga bunga" parties, which were filled with beautiful young women. Many of those women have said they received money from the billionaire media mogul.

    Dressed soberly with her hair pulled back, El-Mahroug said she first made contact with Berlusconi's inner circle when she participated in a beauty contest organized by Fede in Sicily when she was 16.

    Vincenzo Pinto / AFP - Getty Images

    Karima el-Mahroug said she visited a mansion belonging to Silvio Berlusconi, seen here in 2011, a half-dozen times. Each time she received an envelope containing money, el-Mahroug testified Friday.

    After that she made her way to Milan, hoping to find work. She said she tried to get work through another defendant's talent agency but wound up landing a job as a hostess in nightclubs, earning around $130 a night.

    Eventually, she ran into Fede at a restaurant, where she reminded him of his promise in Sicily to help her. Shortly thereafter, she was invited to a dinner party — at Berlusconi's villa outside Milan.

    She testified that she met the premier that night — on Valentine's Day in 2010 — and that he gave her an envelope of 2,000 to 3,000 euros ($2,600 to $3,900), saying it was "a little help" and asking for her telephone number, which she gave him.

    At that party, she said, she introduced herself as Ruby and told other guests a fake tale that she was Egyptian, that her mother was a famous Arab singer and that she was related to then-Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. She was 17 at the time but had passed herself off as being 24.

    El-Mahroug confirmed Friday what other witnesses have testified previously: that at some of the soirees, young female party guests had dressed up like nuns and danced for Berlusconi and then stripped down to their underwear.

    El-Mahroug said Minetti, one of the defendants, had dressed up like a nun at that Feb. 14 party and lifted her costume to show off her legs as she danced in Berlusconi's in-house disco, which was outfitted with a lap-dance pole. El-Mahroug demonstrated from her seat how Minetti had raised her hemline. She said Minetti eventually took off her costume and was in just her lingerie.

    She said other girls dressed up as President Barack Obama and a Milan magistrate who is leading the prosecution against Berlusconi in the sex scandal.

    "The girls who were dressed in costumes approached him in a sensual way as they danced. They raised their skirts," El-Mahroug testified. She added: "I never saw contact."

    El-Mahroug said she visited Berlusconi's mansion, Arcore, a half-dozen times, and that each time she was given an envelope with money, always in 500 euro ($645) bills. The second evening she went she said she was given more than $2,500.

    Prosecutors in Berlusconi's separate trial have said El-Mahroug's testimony is unreliable and are relying on her sworn statements. The defense had initially called her as a witness, but then changed its strategy and didn't call her. That trial is nearing a verdict.

    Related:

    • Berlusconi: 'I'll cover you in gold'
    • 'Ruby' shows up for Berlusconi sex trial
    • Berlusconi sex scandal comes full circle

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    96 comments

    My wife turned into a nun after we got married. She don't want none, she don't give none.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, silvio-berlusconi, featured, bunga-bunga, ruby-the-heart-stealer, karima-el-mahroug
  • 27
    Apr
    2013
    2:21pm, EDT

    Italian politician Enrico Letta names new coalition government

    Domenico Stinellis / AP

    Italian Premier-designate Enrico Letta speaks during a press conference at the Quirinale Presidential Palace in Rome, Saturday, April 27, 2013.

    By James McKenzie and Gavin Jones, Reuters

    Italian center-left politician Enrico Letta said on Saturday he had won support of other parties to form a coalition government that will include one of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's closest allies as deputy prime minister.

    Letta met President Giorgio Napolitano after talks with Berlusconi and leaders of his center-right People of Freedom (PDL) party to confirm that he had reached an accord which would clear the way for a government to be formed.

    "I hope that this government can get to work quickly in the spirit of fervent cooperation and without any prejudice or conflict," Napolitano told reporters.

    PDL secretary Angelino Alfano will be deputy prime minister and interior minister, giving the center-right a powerful voice at the heart of the new government.

    Bank of Italy director general Fabrizio Saccomanni will take the key economy ministry portfolio and former European Commissioner Emma Bonino will be foreign minister.

    The government, which Letta said would contain a record number of women ministers, will be sworn in at 5:30 a.m. EDT on Sunday and Letta is expected to go before parliament to seek a vote of confidence on Monday.

    Letta, 46, the deputy leader of the center-left Democratic Party (PD), spent more than two hours on Saturday in talks with Berlusconi, who will not be a member of the government but is likely to play an important backstage role.

    Letta is on the right of the PD and the nephew of one of Berlusconi's closest aides.

    Agreement had been held up by wrangling over ministerial posts and policy differences, notably over Berlusconi's demand to scrap the unpopular IMU housing tax, a move that would blow an 8 billion euro hole in this year's budget plans.

    Italy, the euro zone's third largest economy, has been without an effective government for months, with the long post-election deadlock holding up any concerted effort to end a recession set to become the longest since World War Two.

    Letta received some encouragement late on Friday when the ratings agency Moody's kept its rating on Italian government debt unchanged at Baa2 because low interest rates were making it possible to buy time to implement much-needed reforms.

    Bond yields have fallen to their lowest in more than two years as investors hope for enough stability to help Italy revive its economy and gradually tackle its large public debt.

    However, Moody's also said medium-term growth prospects were weak and forecast the economy would shrink by 1.8 percent this year, compounding more than two decades of stagnation

    Letta has said his priorities will be boosting the economy and tackling unemployment, restoring confidence in Italy's discredited political institutions and trying to turn Europe away from austerity to focus more on growth and investment.


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    On paper, the priorities laid out by Letta fit in well with proposals from Berlusconi's camp, which has attacked the austerity policies of outgoing prime minister Mario Monti.

    Berlusconi, in the middle of legal battles over a tax fraud conviction and charges of paying for sex with a minor, had pressed for the cabinet to include close political allies and had opposed the inclusion of technocrats.

    In the event, however, several of the big ministries were led by non-political figures.

    As well as Saccomanni at the economy ministry, Anna Maria Cancellieri, the former police official who served as interior minister under Monti took the justice portfolio, while the labor ministry went to Enrico Giovannini, head of statistics agency ISTAT.

    Monti's centrist movement Civic Choice obtained a token presence in the government, with Mario Mauro taking the defense ministry.

    Letta has had to fight strong resistance in parts of the Democratic Party to an accord with Berlusconi, its sworn enemy for almost 20 years.

    The center-left, which threw away a 10-point lead before the elections poll and now trails Berlusconi by more than five points, according to a poll by the SWG institute on Friday.

    The other main force in parliament, Beppe Grillo's anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, has ruled out taking part in a government made up of the two main parties. He called the right-left coalition "an orgy worthy of the best of bunga bunga", a reference to Berlusconi's parties at his private villas.

    Related:

    • Finally! Italy set for new premier after two months without leader
    • Italy's Berlusconi says he would be PM candidate if new vote held
    • Fallen Italian nobles turn castles into B&Bs


    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    3 comments

    Is this new government also sponosred by the ECB and NWO?

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    Explore related topics: government, italy, coalition, silvio-berlusconi, enrico-letta
  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    1:37pm, EDT

    Ruby the Heart Stealer denies sleeping with Berlusconi, admits lying to him

    Giuseppe Cacace / AFP - Getty Images

    Exotic dancer Karima El Mahroug, nicknamed Ruby the Heart Stealer, speaks to journalists at Milan's courthouse on Thursday during a protest against the trial of former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi.

    By Manuela D'Alessandro, Reuters

    MILAN -- The nightclub dancer at the center of former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's sex trial staged a dramatic protest outside the court on Thursday, alleging that she had been unfairly pressured as part of a campaign against him.

    Karima El Mahroug's emotional statement in defense of Berlusconi followed a protest by parliamentarians from his party outside the court last month as the media magnate tries to have the trial moved away from Milan.

    The charges against Berlusconi, which he denies, include paying for sex with El Mahroug -- better known by her stage name "Ruby the Heart Stealer" -- when she was a minor.

    She has always denied being a prostitute or having sex with the 76-year-old billionaire during the now-notorious "bunga bunga" parties at his villa outside Milan, where numerous witnesses have said she was a regular guest.

    Carrying a large sign reading "The Ruby case: Are you not interested in the truth any more?" she said she had been used as part of a deliberate campaign against Berlusconi by magistrates and sections of the press.

    "Today I realize that there is a war under way against him that I do not feel part of, but which has dragged me in and injures me," she said, reading a prepared statement. "I do not want to be a victim of this situation."

    El Mahroug demanded to be allowed to testify in open court but declined to explain to reporters why she had not appeared at previous hearings. As recently as December, she failed to appear in court, later turning up in Mexico, where she said she was on holiday.

    The trial has been suspended while judges consider Berlusconi's request to transfer it away from Milan, where he says magistrates are waging a vendetta against him. The next hearing is due on April 22.

    Berlusconi is also appealing against a four-year sentence for tax fraud, and his legal problems further complicate the political standoff that arose when elections in February left no party able to form a government.

    Pretended Egypt leader was her uncle
    El Mahroug, her voice breaking at times, said she had been publicly humiliated by the implication that she was a prostitute and said that investigators had exploited her vulnerability to attack Berlusconi, leader of Italy's main center-right party.

    Karima el Marough, better known as "Ruby the Heart Stealer," was called to testify over allegations that former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi paid to have sex with her when she was still a minor. NBC's Claudio Lavanga reports.

    She said she faced "real and genuine psychological torture" from magistrates once they realized that she would not provide evidence against Berlusconi.

    "I felt used by sections of the press and judges which had a common objective, to hurt people who had helped me," she said.

    "My suffering is also the fault of those judges ... who described me as a prostitute even though I always denied having sexual relations for money and above all having them with Silvio Berlusconi."

    As well as the charge of paying for sex with a person under the age of 18 years, Berlusconi is also accused of abusing the powers of his office by getting El Mahroug released from custody in 2010 when she was held on an unrelated theft charge.

    Prosecutors say Berlusconi asked police to release her because he thought she was a niece of former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak.

    However, El Mahroug admitted to having made this up, saying she had created a "parallel life" as she tried to imagine a different life from the poverty-stricken world in which she grew up.

    "I'm sorry to have told these lies to Silvio Berlusconi as well, who I am sure today would be ready to help me even if I had told the truth," she said. 

    Related:

    'Ruby the Heart Stealer' shows up in court for Berlusconi sex trial

    Berlusconi to 'Ruby the Heart Stealer': 'I'll cover you in gold ... just don't say anything'

    Woman dressed as burlesque Obama for Berlusconi, court told

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    19 comments

    Actually, what she really meant was..."I DID NOT sleep with him!! My eyes were wide open all the time?!" :-)

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    Explore related topics: featured, sex, italy, trial, silvio-berlusconi, ruby-the-heartstealer, karima-el-mahroug
  • 7
    Mar
    2013
    9:00am, EST

    Italy's Berlusconi sentenced to year in prison over newspaper report

    Remo Casilli / Reuters, file

    Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, seen last month in Rome, is involved in a number of court cases, including one over allegations he paid an under-age teen for sex.

    By Colleen Barry, The Associated Press

    MILAN – A court on Thursday convicted former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi of breach of confidentiality for the illegal publication of wiretapped conversations related to a failed bank takeover in a newspaper owned by his media empire.

    The court sentenced him to one year in jail, but issued no orders on the carrying out of the sentence.

    In Italy, it is rare for anyone to be put behind bars pending a possible appeal except in the case of very serious crimes such as murder.

    Berlusconi's brother, Paolo Berlusconi, was convicted of the same charge and sentenced to two years and three months. Paolo Berlusconi is the publisher of the Milan newspaper Il Giornale, which printed the transcript of the conversation.

    Silvio Berlusconi's defense team had accused the court of seeking a speedy verdict for political impact.

    The verdict does not directly affect Berlusconi's eligibility to participate in a new government because Italy — despite several attempts to pass such legislation — has no law banning those convicted of minor crimes from parliament.

    His center-right coalition last week finished third in parliamentary elections that saw no clear winner. Talks on forming a new government are expected to begin March 20.

    Daniel Dal Zennaro / EPA

    Italian judge Oscar Maggi (center) declares that Berlusconi has been found guilty at the end of the trial Thursday.

    The charge relates to the 2005 publication of a wiretapped call that was part of an investigation into the Unipol financial services company's failed bid to take over the Banca Nazionale del Lavoro.

    Faces four-year sentence
    The bid was blocked by Italy's central bank, contributing to the forced resignation of then-Bank of Italy chief Antonio Fazio.

    Wiretapped conversations are widely published in Italian media, despite the risks of prosecution.

    In a potentially more damaging case, a verdict is also nearing in Berlusconi's appeals trial on a conviction of tax fraud. Prosecutors have demanded the court uphold the October conviction and four-year sentence. They also are seeking a five-year ban from public office.

    Berlusconi also is on trial in Milan for allegedly paying an under-age teen for sex and lying to cover it up, with a verdict likely this month.

    And prosecutors in Naples are investigating him for corruption for allegedly paying an opposition lawmaker 3 million euros (about $3.9 million) to join his party, a move that significantly weakened the previous center-left government of Romano Prodi.

    Related:

    Italy's comeback kid Berlusconi defends wartime fascist Mussolini

    Italy's 'bunga bunga' man Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    Witness: Italian ex-PM Berlusconi hosted strippers dressed as nuns

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    10 comments

    He won't serve the entire year. I'm sure his lawyers will find some loophole for this slimy bastard to cheat the system again.

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    Explore related topics: italy, europe, world, banking, wiretap, silvio-berlusconi, featured, billionaire
  • 27
    Feb
    2013
    10:42am, EST

    Germany, Italy in diplomatic spat over 'clowns' jibe aimed at Berlusconi, Grillo

    Getty Images, Reuters

    Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, left, and comic-turned-politician Beppe Grillo have been described as "clowns" by a German politician.

    By Holger Hansen and Stephen Brown, Reuters

    BERLIN — Italian President Giorgio Napolitano canceled a dinner with the German opposition's chancellor candidate on Wednesday after he described Italian former premier Silvio Berlusconi and comic-turned-politician Beppe Grillo as "clowns."

    Peer Steinbrueck, a Social Democrat who will take on Chancellor Angela Merkel in Germany's next national election in September, has a reputation for gaffes, and his remark created the first diplomatic incident of his accident-prone campaign.


    Steinbrueck said on Tuesday he was "appalled that two clowns have won" Italy's Feb. 24-25 election. The vote was actually inconclusive with no party gaining a majority, although Grillo's protest party surged dramatically.

    Ralph Orlowski / Reuters

    Peer Steinbrueck, an opposition candidate to become Germany's next chancellor, referred to two of Italy's top election finishers as "clowns.

    Napolitano, an 87-year-old former communist with no natural affinity for Berlusconi or Grillo, now faces the difficult task of trying to appoint a coalition government.

    Italian media said he had expressed concern about "populism" after the election result in a private meeting during his visit to Germany, but these comments could not be confirmed.

    As head of state, he may have felt duty-bound to defend the dignity of Italy's political institutions.


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    The German candidate's spokesman said Napolitano canceled "because of Steinbrueck's remarks on Tuesday" and added that the Social Democrat politician "understood Napolitano's domestic political reasons for canceling."

    Napolitano's spokesman was unavailable for comment.

    Napolitano and Steinbrueck had been scheduled to meet over dinner at a Berlin hotel. Napolitano, who visited Munich on Tuesday and Wednesday, was due to meet Merkel in the German capital on Thursday.

    'Testosterone boost'
    Steinbrueck made it absolutely clear in his comments to a party rally in Potsdam he was referring to Grillo and Berlusconi, calling the latter "clearly a clown with a testosterone boost."

    "My impression is that two populists won," he said.

    Berlusconi, a scandal-ridden billionaire media mogul, is very unpopular in Germany and is assailed often in the media.

    But Steinbrueck did himself no favors with his frank talk.

    German politicians are expected to strike a serious tone and refrain from interfering in the internal affairs of European partners. On Twitter, some commentators dismissed the acerbic Steinbrueck as the "real clown."

    Italy's elections, which threaten to tip the euro zone back into crisis, showed a big swell in support for Grillo's 5-Star Movement and a surprisingly strong result for Berlusconi. He had been expected to lose heavily to the center left, which won the lower house but not the senate.

    Both Grillo and Berlusconi campaigned against the austerity measures implemented by technocrat Prime Minister Mario Monti at the urging of Germany's conservative chancellor Merkel.

    Grillo, in his popular blog, laid into Merkel for imposing German-style fiscal austerity on Italy. Berlusconi has made more personal attacks on Merkel, whom he blames for his fall from power in 2011 because of her hesitancy on bailouts.

    Berlusconi, who has been sentenced for tax fraud and is on trial accused of having sex with an under-aged prostitute, is reported to have made rude remarks about Merkel's appearance in a phone call wiretapped by investigators, though he denies this.

    Steinbrueck made waves with undiplomatic statements when he served as finance minister under Merkel between 2005 and 2009, for example referring to the Swiss as Indians running scared from the cavalry during a crackdown he led on tax havens.

    Related:

    Italy careens toward political paralysis as Berlusconi rebounds

    Italy's 'bunga bunga' man Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    17 comments

    Someone should try and get them all in a Volkswagon.

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    Explore related topics: germany, italy, angela-merkel, peer-steinbrueck, silvio-berlusconi, featured, clowns
  • Updated
    25
    Feb
    2013
    8:02pm, EST

    Italy careens toward political paralysis as Berlusconi rebounds

    An Italian TV comedian and blogger, Beppe Grillo, has reached 25 percent of the vote -- more than Silvio Berlusconi and double the vote of the present Prime Minister Mario Monti. ITV's James Mates reports from Rome.

    By Colleen Barry and Frances D'emilio, The Associated Press

    ROME — Italy faced political paralysis Monday as near-complete results in crucial national elections showed no clear front-runner and raised the possibility of a hung parliament. The uncertainty bodes ill for the nation's efforts to pass the tough reforms it needs to snuff out its economic crisis and reassure jittery markets.

    The chaotic election scenes in the eurozone's third-biggest economy spilled across the Atlantic to send the Dow Jones index plunging more than 200 points in its sharpest drop since November.


    A major factor in the murky result was the astonishing vote haul of comic-turned-political leader Beppe Grillo, whose 5 Star Movement has capitalized on a wave of voter disgust with the ruling political class.

    That has coupled with the surprise return as a political force of billionaire media mogul Silvio Berlusconi, who was driven from the premiership at the end of 2011, to roil the Italian ballot. Berlusconi's alliance appeared neck-and-neck with center-left leader Pier Luigi Bersani's alliance for both Parliament's lower house and the Senate.

    The decisions Italy's government makes over the next several months promise to have a deep impact on whether Europe can decisively stem its financial crisis. As the eurozone's third-largest economy, its problems can rattle market confidence in the whole bloc and analysts have worried it could fall back into old spending habits.

    The unfolding uncertainty raised the possibility of new elections in the coming months, the worst possible outcome for markets that are looking to Italy to stay the course with painful but necessary reform.

    Antonio Calanni / AP

    Former Premier Silvio Berlusconi exits a booth as he votes in a polling station in Milan, Sunday.

    While Italy's postwar history has largely been one of revolving-door governments, it has never seen a hung parliament. Experts said that's likely to change now.

    "This has never happened before," said James Walston, a political science professor at American University of Rome. He predicted such a swirl of political chaos that new elections may need to be called as soon as the new legislature chooses the nation's next president this spring.

    The Italian election has been one of the most fluid in the last two decades thanks to the emergence of Grillo's 5 Star Movement, which has throbbed with anger at politics as usual. The movement came against a backdrop of harsh austerity measures imposed by technocrat Premier Mario Monti — who has fared miserably in the elections.


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    Many eligible voters didn't cast ballots, and a low turnout is generally seen as penalizing established parties. The turnout, at under 75 percent — in a nation where it has historically been above 80 percent -- was the lowest in national elections since the republic was formed after World War II.

    Disgust with traditional party politics likely turned off voters, although snow and rain — this was Italy's first winter time national vote — also could be a factor.

    The decisions Italy's government makes over the next several months promise to have a deep impact on whether Europe can decisively stem its financial crisis. As the eurozone's third-largest economy, its problems can rattle market confidence in the whole bloc and analysts have worried it could fall back into old spending habits.

    Bersani, a former communist, has reform credentials as the architect of a series of liberalization measures and has shown a willingness to join with Monti, if necessary. But he could be hamstrung by the more left-wing of his party.

    His party would have to win both houses to form a stable government, and given the uncertainty of possible alliances, a clear picture of prospects for a new Italian government could take days. It is all but impossible that Bersani would team up in a "grand coalition" with his arch-enemy Berlusconi.

    Grillo's camp also played down the prospect of cooperation with the ex-premier, who has been embroiled in sex and corruption scandals.

    "Dialogue with Berlusconi? It is very difficult to imagine that Berlusconi would propose useful ideas (for the movement)," said 5 Star Movement candidate Alessandro Di Battista at Rome headquarters. "It never happened until now, but miracles happen."

    Key indicator slides
    Italy's borrowing costs have reflected the optimism that the country will stick to its reform plans.

    The interest rate on Italy's 10-year bonds, an indicator of investor confidence in a country's ability to manage its debt, fell to 4.19 percent in afternoon trading Monday. Last summer, at the height of concern over Italy's economy, that interest rate was hovering at about 6.36 percent.

    Milan's stock exchange closed slightly higher, with the benchmark FTSE MIB up 0.73 percent to 16,351 points.

    With ballots from about 98 percent of polling stations counted in Senate races, Interior Ministry figures showed Bersani and his allies had 31.69 percent while Berlusconi and his coalition partners were pulling 30.65 percent. Grillo had 23.77 percent.

    Paolo Bona / Reuters

    Pier Luigi Bersani, seen on Sunday with his wife Daniela and his daughters Elisa and Margherita at a polling station in Piacenza, Italy.

    More important than the overall national numbers, however, was the state-of-play in large swing regions -- and Berlusconi was projected to win those.

    Italy's complex electoral law calls for the Senate seats to be divvied up according to how candidates fare region by region, and Berlusconi appeared to be winning big in Lombardy, and also ahead in the closely watched regions of Sicily and Campania, around Naples.

    A Berlusconi triumph in those key regions would likely hand him control of the upper chamber, which in Italy's legislative system is as powerful as the lower house.

    When Berlusconi was forced out of office in November 2011, he was widely assumed to have joined the political dead. At 76, blamed for mismanaging the economy and disgraced by criminal allegations of sex with an underage prostitute, a comeback seemed impossible.

    But one thing has become axiomatic about Berlusconi in his 20 years at the center of Italian politics: Never count him out.

    This time around, in an age of wrenching austerity, he had a very simple campaign strategy: throw around the cash.

    Berlusconi has promised to give back an unpopular property tax imposed by Monti — with money from his own deep pockets, if need be.

    Even his purchase of star striker Mario Balotelli for his AC Milan soccer team was widely seen as a ploy to buy votes. Berlusconi has also appealed to Italy's right-wing by praising Italy's former fascist dictator Benito Mussolini during a ceremony commemorating Holocaust victims.

    "He played a very able game," said Walston. "Considering that he didn't fulfill his previous promises, it's extraordinary."

    With near complete results, Bersani had a tiny edge in the lower chamber, where electoral law enables the biggest vote-getter there to end up with a bonus of more than 50 percent of the seats.

    Monti's centrist coalition was having a terrible election, with his alliance getting roughly 10 percent. Although respected abroad for his measures that helped stave off Italy's debt crisis, the economist has widely been blamed for financial suffering caused by austerity cuts.

    Analysts saw two big stories in Italy's election.

    "The first is the big surprising increase scored by the 5 Star Movement, and the other is the disappointing result" of Monti's coalition, said Massimo Franco, a columnist with Corriere della Sera.

    Berlusconi vows tax break
    Berlusconi, who was forced from office in November 2011 by the debt crisis, has sought to close the gap by promising to reimburse an unpopular tax — a tactic that brought him within a hair's breadth of winning the 2006 election.  The billionaire media mogul only a few days ago told voters if need be, he'd reimburse the tax to them by shelling out from his own pocket to the tune of several billion euros (dollars).

    Grillo's forces are the greatest unknown. His protest movement against the entrenched political class has gained in strength following a series of corporate scandals that only seemed to confirm the worst about Italy's establishment. If his self-styled political "tsunami" sweeps into Parliament with a big chunk of seats, Italy could be in store for a prolonged period of political confusion that would spook the markets. He himself won't hold any office, due to a manslaughter conviction.

    "Italy has developed a two-bloc system. We now have a three bloc system!" Walston said, referring to Grillo's shock success.

    "That might work in a country like Austria, or like Germany" where there aren't such marked differences between coalitions. But in Italy, he said, "the personal, policy and ideological differences are too big."

    Most analysts believe Bersani would seek an alliance with center-right Monti to secure a stable government, assuming parties gathered under Monti's centrist banner gain enough votes.

    While left-leaning Bersani has found much in common with Monti, a large part of his party's base is considerably further to the left and could rebel.

    A key Monti ally called the result "totally negative" and had an even gloomier assessment for his nation.

    "As far as Italy goes," said Gianfranco Fini, "I fear the worst is yet to come."

    Polls: Cigar-chomping former communist will be Italy's next leader

    Pope's resignation could thwart Berlusconi comeback


    This story was originally published on Mon Feb 25, 2013 10:46 AM EST

    91 comments

    So the Italians like their free stuff paid for by the hard work of others just like Obama's homeys.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, europe, world, election, silvio-berlusconi, updated
  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    11:56am, EST

    Pope's abdication could thwart Silvio Berlusconi's political comeback

    Livio Anticoli/Presidenza del Consiglio via Reuters, file

    The resignation of Pope Benedict XVI -- seen being greeted by then-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi at Rome's Ciampino airport in 2009 -- could hamper Berlusconi's political comeback bid, experts say.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    ROME -- The abdication of Pope Benedict XVI is a move of global magnitude, but it is causing even bigger waves in Italy, where some experts believe the blanket media coverage could thwart the political comeback of Silvio Berlusconi.

    The disgraced former prime minister is seeking a return to the spotlight by leading a center-right alliance in this month’s elections, triggered by the resignation of his successor, Mario Monti.

    Berlusconi’s alliance is behind in the polls, not least because of the impending "bunga bunga" court case, where he is accused of paying for sex with an underage nightclub dancer.

    But the 76-year-old billionaire has been catching up with the center-left alliance led by Pier Luigi Bersani, using his media empire to make a string of television appearances – last month clocking up 63 hours of airtime in only 21 days.

    That media-led surge could now be stopped as newspapers and television stations focus on the pope’s decision to stand aside – and the speculation about who will take over.

    The Vatican says the pope will likely not be named pope emeritus to avoid having two popes at once. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    “The election campaign ended at 11:46 a.m. on Monday,” wrote political analyst Luigi Crespi in La Repubblica Tuesday, referring to the moment of Pope Benedict’s announcement.

    'Legacy of a moral leader'
    He is one of a number of experts who believe the sudden shift in national tone from political concerns to issues of spiritual leadership is likely to hit Berlusconi hardest.

    Beppe Severgnini, writing in Corriera della Sera, said the departure of Benedict and the search for his successor would “inevitably fill newspapers, websites, social networks, talk shows and news programs for the next two weeks.”

    “And one of the contenders -- no need to say which -- needs all the stage in order to set up the show, and he will not have one,” Severgnini added, in reference to Berlusconi. “A story like this forces you to think about the role, responsibilities, and the legacy of a moral leader.”

    That will add to the pressure on Berlusconi, even though his "bunga bunga" trial hearing was this week delayed until March 4 – a week after the parliamentary poll, which takes place on Feb. 24 and 25.

    Marcello Sorgi, a columnist for La Stampa newspaper, said the actions of all politicians in Italy would be seen less favorably when compared to the pope’s humility and self-realization that he is no longer physically able to serve his church.

    Voters will see the pope’s act as courageous and compare him to "a political class that has been living off its failures for 20 years," Sorgi wrote, according to Agence France Press.

    Giovanni Orsina, political commentator and professor of history at Luiss Guido Carli University in Rome, said it was “hard to say” if the pope’s resignation would affect the way Catholics vote.

    Slideshow: Bye, Bye Berlusconi

    Petar Pismestrovic / Kleine Zeitung, Austria, Politic

    Click here to view this cartoon slideshow.

    Launch slideshow

    “But it certainly will have an impact on whichever candidate is the most hungry for television coverage and who has the most to gain from media exposure – and that is definitely Berlusconi,” he said. “He is the person who needs to use the media the most.”

    “I think it is unprecedented for such a big event in the Catholic church to happen so close to the climax of an election campaign like this,” he added.

    Orsina pointed out that opinion polls are banned in Italy for the final two weeks of the campaign, making it hard to measure how the pope’s decision has affected voting intentions.

    In November 2011, Berlusconi was forced to resign as prime minister after it became clear that his denial that the country was in an economic crisis was bringing Italy to the brink of disaster.

    In October last year, he was sentenced to four years in prison for an epic offshore tax fraud, put off pending appeals to higher courts.

    He was also placed at a distance by the Vatican, which grew concerned that his personal life did not reflect his political rhetoric of moral leadership.

    Related:

    Italy's comeback kid Berlusconi defends wartime fascist Mussolini

    Witness: Italian ex-PM Berlusconi hosted strippers dressed as nuns

    Pope says retirement is for 'good of the church'

    80 comments

    Of course. For Silvio Berlusconi to regain power, he would need the support of the Vatican, because he is probably one of their primary money laundering professionals. It seems that Italy manages to find some of the most sleazy and corrupt officials to put into office, which explains why Carly Fiori …

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    Explore related topics: europe, featured, world, italy, catholic, pope-benedict, silvio-berlusconi
  • 29
    Jan
    2013
    4:50am, EST

    Italy's comeback kid Berlusconi defends wartime fascist Mussolini

    Vincenzo Pinto / AFP - Getty Images

    Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, seen giving a speech during a campaign rally in Rome Friday, appears to have shrugged off recent scandals.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Producer, NBC News

    ROME — He is the comeback kid of Italian politics, but Silvio Berlusconi's attempt to revive his career is under the spotlight after he defended fascist wartime leader Benito Mussolini at a ceremony for victims of the Nazi Holocaust. 

    The former prime minister said Mussolini's decision to echo Nazi Germany's anti-Jewish laws had been his "worst fault" as a leader "who in so many other ways did well."


    He said: "It is difficult now to put yourself in the shoes of people who were making decisions at that time. Obviously the government of that time, out of fear that German power might lead to victory, preferred to ally itself with Hitler's Germany rather than opposing it."

    The remarks, given to reporters in Milan on Sunday, prompted outrage from many quarters in Italy and overseas.

    “He has lost the plot," said David Patsi, president of the Italian school Dante Alighieri in Jerusalem and whose father was killed in a concentration camp. "He is an idiot. But I am not surprised. Sometime he even reminds me of Mussolini."

    He added: "But I don’t think he is the problem. The problem is that a large number of Italians agree with him.” 

    That helps explain why Berlusconi could still make his comeback, despite a track record would have forced almost any other politician to retire from public life.

    In November 2011, he was forced to resign as prime minister after it became clear that his denial of the economic crisis was bringing Italy to the brink of disaster.

    In October last year, he was sentenced to four years in prison for an epic offshore tax fraud, put off pending appeals to higher courts.

    And, if that weren't enough, he is still on trial for allegedly paying an underage exotic dancer for sex.

    His popularity hit an all-time low and the 76-year-old with a net worth of almost $6 billion -- according to Forbes magazine -- might have been expected to retire to one of his many mansions.

    But he was simply waiting for the chance to strike back in the flamboyant style that won him three terms as prime minister.

    Following the resignation of Mario Monti -- the technocratic prime minister who replaced him in 2011 promising to reinvigorate Italy's languishing economy -- Berlusconi has done what he does best: He carpet-bombed the Italian media with guest appearances, clocking up an impressive 63 hours of airtime in only 21 days.

    In essence, it's as if during the recent U.S. presidential election, former president George W. Bush was given more airtime than Barack Obama and Mitt Romney combined.

    Crisis 'wasn't my fault'
    Seems inconceivable, but then Italy has always been an exception in the Western world, and flamboyant and media-friendly Berlusconi, even as an outsider, draws a bigger audience than his closest competitors combined.

    Officially, Berlusconi is not actually running as a candidate prime minister -- because this was the price it took to persuade the Northern League party to join Berlusconi's People of Freedom party in a coalition.

    But a good result in the elections could mean that all bets are off.

    Karima el Marough, better known as "Ruby the Heart Stealer," was called to testify over allegations that former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi paid to have sex with her when she was still a minor. NBC's Claudio Lavanga reports.

    “Italy’s economic crisis wasn‘t my fault. It was the consequence of the wider international crisis,” a defiant Berlusconi recently told a TV host, before he refused to apologize for previously denying the extent of the crisis.

    It would seem to be an uphill task for Berlusconi to win the premiership for a fourth time -- in polls his coalition is trailing the center-left Democratic Party by at least 12 points.

    But, after his TV onslaught, Berlusconi's bloc saw its poll rating rise by 3 percentage points.

    Berlusconi 'very clever'

    Italians are tired of painfully high unemployment rates, rising taxes, tax-evasion clampdowns and plummeting spending power.

    But it remains to be seen whether they really believe Berlusconi when he claims that the economic crisis wasn't his fault and that his tax-cutting strategy is the solution.

    “Berlusconi has been very clever. He stepped aside when the new government introduced very unpopular austerity measures and has come back in the limelight only now, saying that the cure was worse than the illness,” Maurizio Caprara, a journalist for the daily Corriere della Sera, said.

    “Now he is trying to rally again his troops. Many became disillusioned following his many scandals, but many, as the polls show, may decide to give him one more try,” he added.

    Monti recently called Berlusconi the "Pied Piper of Hamelin," who “leads the mice to drown in the river, having fooled Italians three times already.”

    And yet, at least according to his recently rising popularity, many Italians seem to find his tune irresistible.  

    Related:

    Italy's 'bunga bunga' man Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    Witness: Italian ex-PM Berlusconi hosted strippers dressed as nuns

    Woman dressed as burlesque Obama for Berlusconi, court told

    97 comments

    He is a buffoon, how can you hold a clown responsible for being a fool? He makes Italy even more of a laughing stock than they deserve! The idea that this guy has the backing of any party is an embarrassment to the country!

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    Explore related topics: politics, featured, italy, prime-minister, silvio-berlusconi, claudio-lavanga
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    10:29am, EST

    Italy's 'bunga bunga' man Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    /

    A picture taken on Oct.  27 shows Francesca Pascale at villa Gernetto in Lesmo, near Monza, Italy.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    ROME — Silvio Berlusconi, the disgraced former prime minister of Italy who became infamous for hosting "bunga bunga" sex parties, has announced a relationship with a politician 49 years his junior as he seeks to return to power despite facing an underage prostitution trial.

    The billionaire former leader told television viewers Sunday he is now in a steady relationship with Francesca Pascale, a 27-year-old political councilor in his People of Freedom Party.



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Finally I feel less lonely," he said, adding: "She is 27 years old, with very solid values, beautiful on the outside and even more beautiful on the inside.”

    Disgraced Berlusconi says he'll run for fourth term as Italy's premier

    Pascale bears a striking resemblance to Berlusconi’s ex-wife, Veronica Lario, who left him in 2009 after accusing him of consorting with minors.

    He was forced to resign in November 2011 when it became clear he could not deal with Italy’s economic crisis, but nevertheless Berlusconi made a surprise announcement last week that he will be seeking a fourth term as prime minister in the government elections in late February.

    Scandals and notoriety
    Berlusconi has been at the center of countless scandals and gained worldwide notoriety as the host of the so-called "bunga bunga" parties, private dinners that allegedly led to sexy shows performed by his young and attractive guests.

    He is also a defendant in a trial over allegations that he paid an escort known as “Ruby the heart-stealer” in exchange for sex when she was still a minor.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    /

    Silvio Berlusconi and Francesca Pascale attend a soccer match on Dec. 4 in Milan.

    A judge on Monday set the date for the final hearing of that trial in early February, making a verdict possible before the elections.

    Should Berlusconi win, Italy’s new first lady will be one-third the prime minister's. 

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    138 comments

    What happened to her mouth? Yikes.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: politics, europe, featured, italy, silvio-berlusconi, bunga-bunga

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