During the European debt crisis, when the Italian debt hit 120% of the GDP, it became widely known that then-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was busy partying and holding orgies. The international financial establishment could no longer trust his management, and he was pushed out of office. His sexual behavior was the final blow to his discredited leadership.
Today, all signs indicate that Berlusconi will once again run for office. Why would a man who failed his country economically, politically, and above all morally believe that he could still play a role in the next government?
When Berlusconi first ran for office, he was seen as a successful businessman who could generate the conditions for a more prosperous economy. He considered himself a champion of success and money. He created a party of yes-men that idolized him, and whoever criticized him was attacked by his media conglomerate.
With his fame, money, and power, Berlusconi bought his own reality, believing that the country should serve him, and not him the country. He dominated Italian politics for 17 years, working primarily to grow his economic advantage and protect his legal interests. He made laws to shield himself from prosecution, and even though he was convicted in his latest corruption case, he will not spend a single day in jail.
What Berlusconi embodies is the idea that when you are rich and powerful, you make your own rules, and act as though you are above the law and public morality. His ex-wife Veronica Lario wrote a public letter in 2009 saying that Berlusconi was “a sick man,” insinuating that his sexual weaknesses had reached a point where he is out of control and unfit to govern.









