While many Italians were delighted that Silvio Berlusconi was sentenced Monday to seven years in prison for paying for sex with an underage woman, many more did not really care. They have seen this film dozens of times before. Mr. Berlusconi, who was Italian prime minister three times before he was effectively ousted in 2011 at the height of the debt crisis, has always been one step ahead of the law. He has been endlessly prosecuted and, only last month, an appeals court upheld his four-year prison sentence for a tax-fraud scheme. In all of these cases, he pleads innocence, blames his woes on left-wing conspiracies and overzealous prosecutors, and unleashes his armies of lawyers to set the appeals machine in motion. So far, it has worked. Mr. Berlusconi has never seen the inside of a prison cell and probably never will. Appeals can take years and, in Italy, old men tend not to spend their last years behind bars. He is 76 and looks his age. Still, Monday’s verdict could have serious political repercussions at a time when Italy, which is in deep recession amid soaring unemployment, is desperate for a stable government that can keep economic reforms alive. He remains the head of the People of Freedom party (PdL), which supports the coalition government of Enrico Letta, who became prime minister in April after February’s inconclusive election. If Mr. Berlusconi withdraws his support for the government, it would come crashing down.
Mr. Berlusconi was found guilty of paying for sex with a teenage Moroccan nightclub dancer, the alleged prostitute Karima el-Mahroug, better known as Ruby Rubacuori – Ruby the Heartstealer. She was 17 at the time, in 2010. In Italy, it’s illegal to pay someone who is under 18 for sex.
Mr. Berlusconi, who has admitted handing Ruby envelopes stuffed with €500 notes, but denied having sex with her, was also banned from holding public office. His lawyers have announced their intention to appeal. He is allowed two appeals, each of which could take years.
While Mr. Berlusconi has not even hinted that he might withdraw his support for the government because of the ruling and the embarrassment it has caused him, it cannot be ruled out. The February election was the direct result of his decision, taken late last autumn, to withdraw his support for the technical government of Mario Monti. At the time, Mr. Berlusconi was upset that the Monti government was not protecting him from prosecutions that he considered frivolous.
Full Article: Berlusconi conviction spells trouble for Italy’s fragile government – The Globe and Mail.