Berlusconi dismisses idea of resigning over sex scandal, calls himself Italy’s best premier

By Nicole Winfield, AP
Thursday, September 10, 2009

Berlusconi says he won’t resign over sex scandal

ROME — Premier Silvio Berlusconi brushed off questions about any possible resignation over his sex scandal Thursday, saying he has been Italy’s best premier ever.

Berlusconi also said he was considering suing the woman at the center of the scandal. Patrizia D’Addario, a self-proclaimed prostitute, claims she tape-recorded Berlusconi during a night she says they spent together at the premier’s home last year.

In the tapes, which were obtained by the left-leaning newsweekly L’Espresso, a man identified as Berlusconi is heard telling D’Addario to wait for him on the big bed while he showers.

Berlusconi said Thursday he was considering taking legal action. He said he had been the “victim of an attack by a person who wanted to create a scandal” — an apparent reference to D’Addario.

D’Addario shot back late Thursday, challenging the premier to a public debate about the night in question as well as a more general debate over “relations between men and women, techniques of conquest, sex and power,” the ANSA news agency reported.

Berlusconi spoke at a news conference with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero after an Italian-Spanish summit on Sardinia, during which he was asked about the scandal.

Berlusconi repeated his insistence that he “didn’t pay a lira, a euro, for a sexual favor” and never had.

“I say this also because, for those who love to conquer, the joy and the most beautiful satisfaction is in the conquest,” Berlusconi said, as an expressionless Zapatero looked on. “If you have to pay, I ask you, what joy is there?”

Berlusconi has been under fire for months since his wife announced she was divorcing him because of his fondness for younger women. While polls indicate Berlusconi still has the support of most Italians, the scandal has strained the conservative premier’s relations with the Catholic Church and a key political ally.

At the news conference, Berlusconi was asked whether he might consider resigning given his battles with the Italian media over the sex scandal and the tensions with the church and Gianfranco Fini, who merged his right-wing National Alliance with Berlusconi’s party earlier this year.

After first joking that the journalist clearly only read the left-leaning dailies that have been at the forefront of exposing the scandal, Berlusconi later boasted of his government’s longevity.

“I sincerely believe I have been the best (premier) that Italy has had in its 150-year history, and I base that on what I’ve done and what I’m doing,” he declared.

Opposition leader Dario Franceschini quickly corrected him. “Another one has done more: Benito Mussolini,” Franceschini quipped, referring to the Fascist dictator.

The scandal broke last spring, when the 72-year-old premier’s wife, Veronica Lario, said she was divorcing him, citing his presence at the 18th birthday party of Naples model Noemi Letizia and his party’s lineup of TV starlets as candidates for European Parliament elections.

Letizia recently said she actually enjoyed the notoriety the scandal had caused and said she hoped it would help her fulfill her dream to go to America and be an actress. In that vein, she was hounded by the paparazzi Thursday night as she arrived in a purple and gold dress at the Venice Film Festival, where D’Addario made a similarly well-photographed entrance last week.

Berlusconi said Thursday that three European Parliament candidates who attended a course his party offered had all been well-educated, multilingual, sophisticated women who were doing a fine job representing Italy in Europe.

After Lario’s accusations, several young women including D’Addario went public with stories that they were paid to attend parties at Berlusconi’s homes by a Berlusconi acquaintance, Gianpaolo Tarantini.

Tarantini has apologized for creating a scandal for the premier. He says he reimbursed the women for travel and other expenses but that Berlusconi never knew about it.

The premier on Thursday confirmed that he had been at a few functions with Tarantini, but he stressed that the “beautiful women” Tarantini brought along were his own friends, not Berlusconi’s.

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