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Berlusconi down but not out with Senate vote

A supporter displays a poster depicting Italian Former Premier Silvio Berlusconi on the backdrop of former Italian terrorist group Brigate Rosse (Red Brigates) and reading in Italian "Political prisoner", while he waits for Berlusconi's speech at a rally organized outside of his Rome residence, Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2013. The Italian Senate has begun debating whether to kick Silvio Berlusconi out of Parliament following his tax fraud conviction. The vote is scheduled later in the day and most analysts expect he will lose his seat. Berlusconi fans massed in front of Berlusconi's Rome palazzo for a planned rally that analysts say is essentially the start of Italy's next electoral campaign. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

ROME (AP) — The Italian Senate was poised Wednesday to kick Silvio Berlusconi out of Parliament following his tax fraud conviction, but the three-time premier isn’t going quietly.

A supporter displays a poster depicting Italian Former Premier Silvio Berlusconi on the backdrop of former Italian terrorist group Brigate Rosse (Red Brigates) and reading in Italian “Political prisoner”, while he waits for Berlusconi’s speech at a rally organized outside of his Rome residence, Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2013. The Italian Senate has begun debating whether to kick Silvio Berlusconi out of Parliament following his tax fraud conviction. The vote is scheduled later in the day and most analysts expect he will lose his seat. Berlusconi fans massed in front of Berlusconi’s Rome palazzo for a planned rally that analysts say is essentially the start of Italy’s next electoral campaign. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Berlusconi fans massed in front of his Rome palazzo Wednesday for a planned rally that analysts said was essentially the start of Italy’s next electoral campaign, even if Berlusconi won’t be running.

It’s a coup read a banner strung from the windows of the palazzo.

Italy’s high court on Aug. 1 upheld Berlusconi’s tax fraud conviction and four-year prison term stemming from his Mediaset empire’s purchase of television rights to U.S. films. The Senate vote on whether to remove Berlusconi’s seat stems from a 2012 law that bans anyone sentenced to more than two years in prison from holding or running for public office for six years.

Berlusconi’s four-year prison term was reduced automatically to one year under a general amnesty; he will serve his time either under house arrest or through public service.

Berlusconi claims he didn’t receive a fair trial and that the judges were out to”eliminate” him from public office. His lawyers have also charged that the 2012 law is unconstitutional and can’t be applied retroactively to crimes allegedly committed before it was passed.

In a last-ditch bid to save his seat, Berlusconi sent a letter to opposition senators this week warning them that kicking a three-time premier out of public office would tarnish Italy’s image abroad and weigh on their consciences, “a responsibility that in the future will shame you in front of your children, your electors and all Italians.”

Nevertheless, enough lawmakers seem poised to vote to remove Berlusconi, ending his two-decade run in public office but not his political life.

Berlusconi remains head of his relaunched Forza Italia party, which on Tuesday officially withdrew its support of the government of Premier Enrico Letta and is now in the opposition.

Despite the switch, Letta’s government comfortably survived a confidence vote early Wednesday and passed the annual budget. He survived because Berlusconi’s one-time political heir, Angelino Alfano, split from his mentor earlier this month and formed his own new center-right party that remains loyal to Letta.

Analysts said they expected Letta’s government — a hybrid of his Democratic Party and Alfano’s New Center-Right — would continue in the short term.

The opposition, however, now includes two strong leaders: Berlusconi and the comic-turned-politician Beppe Grillo, whose populist Five Star Movement encapsulates the discontent many Italians feel with the country’s byzantine politics.

Berlusconi by himself doesn’t have the strength to bring down Letta’s government, but he’s going to make it more difficult for the Democratic Party to stay in the majority,” said Giovanni Orsina, deputy director of the school of government at Rome’s LUISS University. “I think Silvio Berlusconi can do some damage to this government.

James Walston, a professor of international relations at American University of Rome, said the vote and rally essentially mark the start to a new electoral campaign in which Berlusconi won’t be running for office but will be very much a protagonist as the head of a party.

Berlusconi over the last few days has been conducting a very strident campaign,” Walston said, referring to his letter to the opposition senators. “This is Berlusconi laying down part of his program for what he hopes is going to be elections very shortly.

Meanwhile, Berlusconi still faces other legal problems, including a seven-year prison term and lifetime ban from holding public office for his conviction of paying an underage prostitute for sex at his infamous Bunga Bunga parties and trying to cover it up. He has professed his innocence and plans to appeal.

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Barry reported from Milan; Patricia Thomas contributed.

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