-OpEd-
ROME — There is not a single good reason to criticize Italy’s new “Super Green Pass”, the new decree announced on Thursday that will mandate more than 20 million of the country’s workers to prove they’ve tested negative to COVID-19 or that they’ve been vaccinated to work, beginning Oct 15.
It is the right thing to do in a country locked in a decisive, long and painful fight against the pandemic. Some 10 million Italians still haven’t been immunized and the pace of the vaccine rollout has declined significantly in September, with the number of shots administered daily dropping from 142,000 to about 70,000.
We have written it many times and repeat it now: Against the backdrop of possible new restrictions in the winter, the mandatory “green pass” is no “health dictatorship,” but a way to keep the economy open and strike a fair balance between the freedom of a few and everyone’s right to health. Extending it to employees and self-employed people is not discrimination. It is protection and prevention.
There are times in the life of a nation when taking the ultimate responsibility is called for.
But precisely because of the significance of this measure, Prime Minister Mario Draghi‘s silence on it was striking. He should have personally explained this decree to Italians. Instead, the news was announced by government cabinet ministers in a press conference. Draghi’s absence was likely a way to underline that all the four political parties underpinning his government, including Matteo Salvini’s far-right Lega Party, agreed on the measure.
But surely this is not enough. There are times in the life of a nation when taking the ultimate responsibility is called for, and this is one of those. We stand again at a crucial stage of Italy’s fight against the virus, and the “Super Green Pass” calls into question our most precious asset beyond life: work, with its rights and duties. With an entire community of skeptics needing to be convinced and engaged, a prime minister worthy of that title must put not only his signature on it — but also his face.
*Giannini is La Stampa’s editor-in-chief