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Keeping pace with Italian voters

  • Mark Mardell
  • 9 Apr 08, 09:18 AM

GianBeppe Moreschi holds up a highly polished brown hide, disconcertingly still very alligator-shaped.
shoes being made at the Moreschi factory

We are in and he鈥檚 telling me how it takes two such skins to make one special pair of shoes to order.

We walk down rows of women at machines, stamping out the bits that go to make up shoes, and others sewing them together.

There are over 300 separate operations by hand to make a pair of shoes at this factory.

They charge 拢3,000 for a customised pair of alligator pumps, and don鈥檛 make a lot of profit out of it. But I am not here to talk about slippery reptiles with sharp, little teeth, but Italian politicians and the elections this weekend.

A cheap shot, I know. Most Italians have even less respect for their politicians than voters in other countries. But is it possible that could be about to change?

Flat economy

Mr Moreschi tells me that the Italian economy is flat and difficult for business people like himself who stick to the rules.

He says Italian business needs fewer regulations but ones that people will obey.

While custom-made alligator shoes are the exception, the firm is at the top end of the market, producing hand-stitched quality shoes that sell all over the world: from prestigious British customers to new shops opening up all over their growing market, Russia.

With 450 employees and a turnover of 30m euros a year, his business is obviously thriving but his is one of the few companies left in an area that used to be thronging with shoe factories.

Many have fallen victim to cheap imports from China. What鈥檚 his secret?

鈥淭here鈥檚 no secret,鈥 he tells me, 鈥渏ust following the quality established in my father鈥檚 day鈥.

His dad started the company at the end of the war and GianBeppe鈥檚 three sons are all in the business today.

He has a twinkily engaging smile and a passionate enthusiasm for the craftsmanship.

I soon find myself more interested in questioning him about the arcanery of footware production than Italian politics.

Blue Peter

I learn to recognise leather made from ostrich (it鈥檚 got goose-, or I suppose, ostrich-pimples) and discover that Peccary leather is the softest money can buy.

How do you make suede, I ask. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a Blue Peter question,鈥 a colleague observes. Well, I like to learn something new, and the answer is that leather is the outside of the animal, suede the inside.

But I drag myself back to my real purpose here. Mr Moreschi hopes these elections will make a break with the past.

At first sight this is surprising. It鈥檚 easy to see these elections as 鈥渢he same old, the same old鈥.
Centre left leader Walter Veltroni

When I covered , I thought it was the end of the pugnacious billionaire-turned politician. But he鈥檚 back and in the lead in the polls.

, is a new leader and a good communicator but on the face of it doesn鈥檛 offer radically new policies to the last government. So why the hope for change?

After when the hard left pulled the rug, the centre left鈥檚 Walter Veltroni has said he won鈥檛 do a deal with them.

Mr Moreschi observes that, in business, 51% control is real control. Not in Italian politics.

鈥淚鈥檓 an optimist and the most important thing is that our politicians follow the right path,鈥 he says.

鈥淭he trouble is we have too many little, tiny parties and what we need is something like what you鈥檝e got in England: one on the left, one on the right and, when the need arises, they need to be able to take decisions and work together.鈥

'Chairman of the Board'

Intriguingly, there is talk of the possibility of a German-style 鈥淕rand coalition鈥.

A former ambassador-turned political commentator for Milan鈥檚 Corriere della Sera, Sergio Romano, says this is a real possibility, at least to achieve some change to the political system.

鈥淭hey all realise that Italy has a very bad political system and the time for reform is now,鈥 he told me.
Centre right leader Silvio Berlusconi

Now Berlusconi and Veltroni probably agree without saying so on the need for constitutional reform, to give the prime minister the powers of his colleagues in Europe.

鈥淭he Italian Prime Minister does not have the power of the British PM, the German chancellor or the Spanish PM, he is really just a chairman of the board and nothing more.

鈥淚f you have lots and lots of parties, then governing is a very difficult task because you have to negotiate every single measure and generally you reach the lower possible level of decisions鈥.

Is this wishful thinking or could Italian politics be about to change?



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