HomeNewsOpinionBerlusconi wrote the playbook for the modern strongman

Berlusconi wrote the playbook for the modern strongman

Italy’s longest-serving postwar premier turned media power into enduring influence

June 12, 2023 / 17:22 IST
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Silvio Berlusconi
Former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi was Italy's longest-serving premier despite scandals over his sex-fueled parties and allegations of corruption, died, according to Italian media. He was 86. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, File)

Before there was Donald Trump, before Viktor Orban, before Boris Johnson,
there was Silvio Berlusconi.

The billionaire media tycoon, who died Monday at the age of 86, turned his celebrity into a magnet for Italy’s forgotten everyman, gaining four stints as prime minister and forging an enduring political influence. A former cruise-ship crooner, he wrote the cheat sheet for the populism that today challenges liberal democracies worldwide. From his taut, perma-tanned appearance, to his mockery of women, his railing against immigrants, his abuse of political power to further his personal business dealings and his confrontation with the courts, Berlusconi was the very model of the modern right-wing strongman.

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Berlusconi rose to power in the last two decades of the 20th century when television was the dominant medium. His ownership of the country’s first privately owned network allowed him to bombard Italians with his message, laying the groundwork for politics in the age of Twitter and Instagram. His business empire also comprised a newspaper, magazines, a radio station, publishing house and a soccer team. During his nine years at Palazzo Chigi — the most of any postwar premier -- he had control of state TV too.

Berlusconi launched his political career when his connections lost their influence in a vast bribery scandal that razed Italy’s postwar governing class. He decided he needed to shift lanes. He wasn’t wedded to policies or ideology. Private polling he did at the time showed him he would be more likely to win campaigning to the right, even though he’d previously been associated with socialists.