– Para los datos, el especial del ‘Corriere della Sera‘.
– Gian Antonio Stella sobre cómo derecha e izquierda han infravalorado estos años a Grillo: «Risatine sbagliate di destra e sinistra«.
– En ‘The Guardian’, el texto que hace dos semanas escribió John Hooper (viejo conocido de España) sobre «Beppe Grillo: populist who could throw Italy into turmoil at general election».
– Javi Gómez ya lo retrató hace meses: «Beppe, el estrangulador de la política«.
– Enric González: «Un país hastiado y furioso«.
– Rubén Amón: «Italia è mobile qual piuma al vento»
– Rosanna Marchese: «Las elecciones que el PD no quiso ganar«.
– Miguel Mora: «La tercera república italiana»
– En italiano, Eugenio Scalfari, fundador de La Repubblica, el pasado domingo, «Tramonta un sistema di patacche e bugie«.
Vincenzo Marino: «Arrendiamoci, siamo inutili«. Via Mariangela Paone.
– Antonio Elorza: «Anarcofascismo, antisistema«. Vía
ACTUALIZACIÓN
Aquí iré incorporando los que me vayan recomendando a lo largo del día. Por ejemplo:
– Reflexiones al vuelo de Roger Senserrich sobre el sistema electoral. Vía Fernando Romero.
Stay with this guys, you’re helping a lot of people.
I don’t think we should be srrupised if conflicting signals come out of the Five Star Movement.One reason is obvious. It is an insurgency, not a regular political party, so it doesn’t have a long history of party discipline.And there is a deeper reason. If you run on a platform of overturning the current parties, well, they are the parties who got Italy into the EU and the euro. So if you aren’t ant-EU or anti-euro explicitly, you are implicitly, since the over-priced euro is one of Italy’s real economic problems, as you can see from their stalled export numbers and very high current account deficit.And as for the suggestion that a political union and devaluation would help, I think that the answer is yes in the short term, but beyond that we need to remember that Italy’s problems go back further than the euro.Over the past twenty years, Italy’s GDP/head has declined from 115% of the EU average to 100%. Twenty years ago Italy’s GDP was – arguably, since some funny accounting was involved – larger than that of the UK, and now it is 15% smaller. This indicates structural problems that are bigger than the euro.