Italy took a sharp turn to the right yesterday after Giorgia Meloni’s Eurosceptic populist party swept to victory in general elections, putting the one-time Mussolini admirer on course to become the first woman to lead the country.
Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party, which has neo-fascist roots, is set to win around 26 percent of the vote in Sunday’s election, while her wider coalition secured a clear majority in parliament.
With former premier Silvio Berlusconi and Matteo Salvini’s far-right League, they will now begin forming the most right-wing government since World War II, a process likely to take weeks.
Meloni’s success represents a seismic change in Italy — a founding member of the European Union and the eurozone’s third-largest economy — and for the EU, just weeks after the far-right performed strongly in Sweden’s elections.
Meloni used her first public statement to emphasise unity, saying she would govern “for all Italians”.
But the 45-year-old, whose party has never held office, has huge challenges ahead, from soaring inflation to a looming energy crisis and the war in Ukraine.
Congratulations flooded in from Meloni’s European nationalist allies, from Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki to Spain’s far-right party Vox.
“Meloni has shown the way for a proud, free Europe of sovereign nations,” Vox leader Santiago Abascal tweeted.
But Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares warned that “populist movements always grow, but it always ends in the same way — in catastrophe”.
A spokesman for the European Commission said it hoped for “constructive cooperation” with the new government, a line echoed by the Kremlin.
“We are eager to work with Italy’s government on our shared goals: supporting a free and independent Ukraine, respecting human rights and building a sustainable economic future,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said.
“Italy is a very Europe-friendly country with very Europe-friendly citizens and we assume that won’t change,” added a spokesman for German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
Meloni and Salvini are strongly Eurosceptic, although they no longer want Italy to leave the eurozone.
The Brothers of Italy head says Rome must assert its interests more, and has policies that look set to challenge Brussels on everything from public spending rules to mass migration.
Her coalition also wants to renegotiate Italy’s part of the EU’s post-pandemic recovery fund, arguing the almost €200bn ($193bn) it expects to receive should take into account the energy crisis.
But the funds are tied to a series of reforms only just begun by outgoing Prime Minister Mario Draghi, and analysts say she has limited room for manoeuvre.
Meloni campaigned on a platform of “God, country and family”, sparking fears of a regression on rights in the Catholic-majority country.
Berlusconi struck a Europe-friendly note, pledging the new government would maintain a “European profile” and adding that “good relations with our historic allies and the big countries of the EU are essential for Italy’s future”.
Meloni had been leading opinion polls since snap elections were called in July after Draghi’s government collapsed.
Hers was the only party not to join Draghi’s national unity coalition in February 2021, making her effectively the sole opposition leader.
Salvini highlighted this as he rued his League party’s poor performance, which at around nine percent is almost half that of its 17% showing in 2018.
However, he said he would play his part in the new government, which he hoped could “go for at least five years straight”.
Turnout fell to a historic low of around 64%, and some Italians were sanguine about the result, viewing it as yet another chapter in the country’s infamous instability.
“I’m not too pessimistic because Italians, in problematic situations, always find a solution,” noted Fabrizio Sabelli, out and about in Rome yesterday morning.
Meloni has distanced herself from her party’s neo-fascist past — and her own, after praising dictator Benito Mussolini as a teenager — and presented herself as a straight-talking but unthreatening leader.
“Her challenge will be to turn this electoral success into a governing leadership... that can last,” Lorenzo De Sio, head of Italian electoral studies centre CISE, told AFP.
Italian politics is notoriously unstable, with nearly 70 governments since 1946, and Meloni, Salvini and Berlusconi do not always agree.
Salvini will “have a more marginal role than he wants in the formation of a new government,” said Sofia Ventura, a professor of political science at the University of Bologna.
The coalition partners have a joint programme for government, including tax cuts and promises to cut mass migration.
But while Meloni strongly supports the EU’s sanctions against Russia over Ukraine, Salvini has criticised them as ineffective.
Meanwhile billionaire media mogul Berlusconi, whose Forza Italia party won around 8% of the vote, has long been friends with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Democratic Party chief Enrico Letta effectively quit after his centre-left formation did worse than expected at 19 percent.
Letta, a former premier who had repeatedly warned Meloni was a danger to democracy, said he would not be a candidate in an upcoming leadership contest.
Leader of Italian far-right party u201cFratelli d’Italiau201d (Brothers of Italy), Giorgia Meloni reacts as she holds a placard reading u201cThank You Italyu201d after she delivered an address at her party’s campaign headquarters overnight yesterday in Rome. (AFP)