Among those who will relish Silvio Berlusconi’s present woes is Rupert Murdoch. The media mogul has reserved a special enmity for the Italian premier ever since he doubled the rate of VAT on satellite television to 20 per cent.
The subtle response of Murdoch’s Sky Italia was to screen the film Killing Silvio, which depicts a man’s quest to assassinate Berlusconi.
Later, the Murdoch-owned Times and New York Post relentlessly recorded Berlusconi’s sexual peccadilloes and financial misdemeanours. The prime minister has since threatened to sue the newspapers in question for libel.
The feud between the pair got hotter last month when Murdoch’s News Corp announced that it had filed a lawsuit against two of the firms in Berlusconi’s media empire. Murdoch claimed that RTI and Publitalia — the TV and advertising arms of Mediaset — had refused to accept advertising from Sky Italia.
So, after Berlusconi was stripped of his immunity from prosecution, it was no surprise to see the Times’s leader denounce the Italian premier with a ferocity unmatched by its competitors:
Little could have more clearly shown Mr Berlusconi’s contempt for the law than his lawyer’s Orwellian assertion to the court that the prime minister was no longer “first among equals” but ought to be considered “first above equals” . . . He has sought to live above the law; now he will be consumed by it. It is surely time that Mr Berlusconi stop putting his own interests ahead of his country’s. He should resign.
Confronted by the struggle between Murdoch and Berlusconi, many may be tempted to echo Henry Kissinger’s remark during the Iran-Iraq war: “It’s a pity they can’t both lose.”
But for once we should be grateful for the “Dirty Digger” and his formidable media machine. His self-interested war against Berlusconi may yet hasten the decline of a man who continues to subject democracy and civility to remarkable degradation.