Bianchini, 44, owns a restaurant in Viterbo, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the capital, Rome.
But the business he has owned for 20 years now hangs by a thread, as support measures amounting to 32 billion euros ($39bn) for activities ravaged by the pandemic have again been put on hold, this time after the Italian government fell on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte’s resignation has plunged the country into further chaos.
Italians are usually able to ignore government frictions, the norm in a country that has been through 66 coalitions since World War II.
But this time, the political crisis is happening during a global pandemic.