Italians are normally not good at waiting in line. During the weekly trip to the bank or post office it helps to have sharp elbows and a sense of entitlement. Getting on a bus or train can be more like packing down in a rugby scrum. But when those big moments in life arrive - the next step in your career, a business idea to launch, moving out of your parent's home - Italy is afflicted by a troubling surplus of patience.
Nowhere is that more true than in politics, where Italy's gerontocracy and unwritten party rules co-opt the young with the false promise that they should wait for a few years and their turn will come around. By the time they do finally step up, once aspiring (and inspiring) leaders have long since lost their mojo and forgotten the new ideas they once had.
What Italian politics desperately needs is a queue jumper, and it may have found just the man. On Feb. 16, Matteo Renzi, 34, beat out two establishment figures in the Democratic Party primary ahead of the race for mayor of Florence. This is the second time Renzi has pushed his way to the front of the line. Five years ago, at just 29, he bested experienced rivals to win the post of President of the Florentine province, a somewhat less influential role that is, nevertheless, normally occupied by gray-haired men.
Renzi's rise comes at a difficult time for the Democratic Party, the main center-left opposition to Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's right-wing coalition government. At the national level, the party is in utter disarray, mired in petty battles of personalities and unable to cast aside the remnants of bygone labels and ideologies. This week, Democratic party chief Walter Veltroni resigned after the party's sitting member in Sardinia was walloped in regional elections by Berlusconi's hand-picked candidate. After Veltroni's resignation, Berlusconi quipped that he is "getting used to not having an opposition."
Renzi is the Democratic Party's chance at change. Florence's mayoral election is in June and he is expected to easily win the left-leaning city. "If he becomes mayor of Florence, he becomes the hope," says one Rome-based opposition insider. "Then people start talking about the Italian Obama; start saying 'I've seen the future of Italian politics.'" (See pictures of the world reacting to Obama's win.)
The son of a Tuscan small business owner, Renzi has focused his efforts on making the provincial government more efficient and delivering services. In particular, he's improved Florentine school facilities, expanded recycling and seems to have a solution to flooding along the Arno river.
A practicing Catholic, Renzi says he won't let the Vatican guide his policy. In the primary, he ran a classic grass-roots campaign using the Internet, Facebook and other tactics drawn from Obama's successful presidential run. "I'm a politician," he says. "I don't perform miracles. I've just tried to make the administration of government work better, day in and day out."
Sometimes boisterous and, yes, still a bit baby-faced, Renzi was first featured in TIME three years ago when I profiled Italy's crippling generation gap ahead of the 2006 poll that pitted Romano Prodi against Berlusconi, two candidates then pushing 70. We caught up again last summer when Renzi was watching Barack Obama's unlikely story unfold and preparing to defy the party bosses in Florence and Rome with his bid for the mayoralty. "Everyone was telling me to stay put, that the smart move was to run for another term at the province," Renzi says. "I said 'no thank you. I'm running for mayor.'" One regional party boss in Tuscany even told him explicitly: "Respect the line, buddy, wait your turn. I said 'No, in fact, I'm cutting the line!'"
This weekend, in the wake of Veltroni's departure, Democratic leaders will gather in Rome to discuss the way ahead. The party has no real strategy to take on Berlusconi, and no real new ideas to fix Italy. Perhaps it's time to think the unthinkable and hope that Renzi cuts the line again.

1 comments:
“A new Obama”? “Firenze’s Obama”?
A new guy of the slogans? “Yes we can”. “I have a hope” And so on and forth.
The Italian left has already had one such guy who had idolized B.O., appropriating all his slogans for his election campaigns, aping his attitudes, his gestures, his ways of moving and gesticulating, moving in his shadow, persistently trying to ingratiate him and to obtain his endorsement. I’m happy to say, to no avail: Obama was smart enough to beautifully ignore him.
His name is Walter Veltroni, he of the floppy jowls. Look what a wretched overall result he had. Elected leader of the “Partito Democratico in October 2007, flopping miserably as candidate pre-mier in April 2008; kicked out as leader in February 2009, after two more regional fiasco-es (Abruzzi and Sardegna) of the party he was at the head off. The shortest-lived, and most pathetic party leader Italy ever had.
Fact is, the last leader the Italian left had (Partito Comunista Italiano) with some appeal, dignity, capacity for thought and tactical ability was Enrico Berlinguer – and he died in June 1984, 25 years ago. Since then, it has been a succession of desolating grey figures. In reality, Italy pioneered the rest of the world in the resounding crash of a left identifying with Marxism, that eventually oc-curred throughout the world at the turn of the ‘90’s into the ‘90’s, including the soviet РОДИНA – a crumbling due to the intrinsic weakness of the ideology it was resting on. The Italian left has since been in disarray – nay, in smithereens.
Let’s welcome, then, this Matteo Renzi, this 33 year old enfant prodige of Italian leftist politics, for a party that has always been notorious for its gerontophilia (remember the compositions of the So-viet Politbüro of yesteryear? the various Khrushev, Brezhnev, Andropov, Chernenko, Kosy-gin….’??!!!)…
It’s agreed that a good and vigorous opposition is needed to keep the majorities on their toes. “Il Berlüsca” is now 73, Prodi (GOD FORBID!!!) 70… the Italian political landscape is rather wiz-ened.
It’s also true that – with the exception of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – enfants-prodige in music generally flop out in their adult years.
OK, let’s what this Matteo Renzi guy can do as mayor of Firenze if he gets elected. That city undoubtedly deserves a good Mayor.
“A new Obama”? “Firenze’s Obama”?
A new guy of the slogans? “Yes we can”. “I have a hope” And so on and forth.
The Italian left has already had one such guy who had idolized B.O., appropriating all his slogans for his election campaigns, aping his attitudes, his gestures, his ways of moving and gesticulating, moving in his shadow, persistently trying to ingratiate him and to obtain his endorsement. I’m happy to say, to no avail: Obama was smart enough to beautifully ignore him.
His name is Walter Veltroni, he of the floppy jowls. Look what a wretched overall result he had. Elected leader of the “Partito Democratico in October 2007, flopping miserably as candidate pre-mier in April 2008; kicked out as leader in February 2009, after two more regional fiasco-es (Abruzzi and Sardegna) of the party he was at the head off. The shortest-lived, and most pathetic party leader Italy ever had.
Fact is, the last leader the Italian left had (Partito Comunista Italiano) with some appeal, dignity, capacity for thought and tactical ability was Enrico Berlinguer – and he died in June 1984, 25 years ago. Since then, it has been a succession of desolating grey figures. In reality, Italy pioneered the rest of the world in the resounding crash of a left identifying with Marxism, that eventually oc-curred throughout the world at the turn of the ‘90’s into the ‘90’s, including the soviet РОДИНA – a crumbling due to the intrinsic weakness of the ideology it was resting on. The Italian left has since been in disarray – nay, in smithereens.
Let’s welcome, then, this Matteo Renzi, this 33 year old enfant prodige of Italian leftist politics, for a party that has always been notorious for its gerontophilia (remember the compositions of the So-viet Politbüro of yesteryear? the various Khrushev, Brezhnev, Andropov, Chernenko, Kosy-gin….’??!!!)…
It’s agreed that a good and vigorous opposition is needed to keep the majorities on their toes. “Il Berlüsca” is now 73, Prodi (GOD FORBID!!!) 70… the Italian political landscape is rather wiz-ened.
It’s also true that – with the exception of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – enfants-prodige in music generally flop out in their adult years.
OK, let’s what this Matteo Renzi guy can do as mayor of Firenze if he gets elected. That city un-doubtedly deserves a good Mayor.
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