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How dangerous are Meloni and Co. for Europe?

2022-09-16T12:25:43.955Z


How dangerous are Meloni and Co. for Europe? Created: 09/16/2022, 14:14 Giorgia Meloni during at a campaign event in Milan. © LaPresse/ZUMA/dpa The nationalist Giorgia Meloni beckons a great victory in the parliamentary elections in Italy. With her extreme right-wing party, she wants to "rebuild" Italy. A warning was sent to Brussels. Rome - Italy is facing a violent shift to the right - and E


How dangerous are Meloni and Co. for Europe?

Created: 09/16/2022, 14:14

Giorgia Meloni during at a campaign event in Milan.

© LaPresse/ZUMA/dpa

The nationalist Giorgia Meloni beckons a great victory in the parliamentary elections in Italy.

With her extreme right-wing party, she wants to "rebuild" Italy.

A warning was sent to Brussels.

Rome - Italy is facing a violent shift to the right - and Europe is looking nervously at the upcoming parliamentary elections in the Mediterranean country.

"We are concerned," says former EU Commissioner and experienced Italian MEP Emma Bonino, reporting unease in other capitals as well.

The reason for this has three names: Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Salvini, Silvio Berlusconi.

The three party leaders of the centre-right bloc stand a good chance of a landslide victory in next week's (September 25) elections in Rome.

Melonie: "Bureaucrats from Brussels"

Above all, Meloni from the extreme right-wing Fratelli d'Italia ("Brothers of Italy"), who clearly leads in the polls and has the best chance of becoming prime minister, worries many.

The Roman does not think much of the EU, regularly scolds the “bureaucrats from Brussels” and orients her ideas towards countries like Hungary and Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who is a friend of hers.

The fact that Meloni's coalition partners - ex-Prime Minister Berlusconi and right-wing populist Salvini - have maintained close ties with Russia and Vladimir Putin for years is increasing the unrest in Europe.

Because they are struggling for unity on the side of Kiev in the Ukraine war.

Salvini publicly doubts the effectiveness of the sanctions against Russia and thus blames the EU for the dramatic increase in energy costs.

The head of the Lega has not hidden his attitude towards Moscow in recent years.

He once slipped on a Putin fan shirt on Red Square and even in the European Parliament.

In 2015, Salvini said he would trade two Mattarellas for half a Putin - Sergio Mattarella is Italy's President.

This week, focus immediately shifted to Salvini and the Lega when an intelligence report emerged in the US that Russia had been paying foreign parties for years.

Salvini promptly dismissed the fact that he "never asked for or received any money, no rubles, euros, dinars or dollars".

Berlusconi also said he was "of course" not involved in the scandal - in 2010 he had described his good friend Putin as a "gift from heaven".

How dangerous can Meloni and her legal alliance Europe really be?

"I don't think that Giorgia Meloni poses a threat to the stability of the EU," says political scientist Andrea Ungari from the Luiss University in Rome.

“Italy has its place in Europe.

Also, it's different when you speak from the opposition, or when you sit down at the table with all the EU heads of state and government.”

In fact, since the fall of Mario Draghi's government in July, Meloni has been trying to appear moderate, reliable and even supportive of the state.

She sent video messages explaining in English, Spanish and French that concerns abroad were unfounded and that Italy remained a strong partner under her.

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“This will make Europe weak”

Critics say Meloni ate chalk.

And indeed, the tone became rougher this week.

At an election rally in Milan, she called out to supporters that the “fun” was over in Europe.

With her at the helm, Italy will again first pursue its own interests and only then think in European terms.

The announcement was not surprising.

Meloni wants to “risollevare” Italy, ie to put it back on its feet, as the Fratelli d'Italia election posters say.

Memories of Donald Trump's slogan "Make America Great Again" are awakened.

In the first sentence of the joint election manifesto, the centre-right announces a foreign policy "focused on the national interest and the defense of the homeland".

Meloni wants EU law to be brought back under national law.

She wants strong nation states instead of a union.

That is entirely to the liking of Hungary's Prime Minister Orban - whose country can no longer be regarded as a full-fledged democracy, according to a report by the European Parliament - and the national-conservative PiS party from Poland.

After the right-wing populist Sweden Democrats are likely to come to power in the Scandinavian EU country, Italy would have the fourth right-wing government in the Union.

"This will make Europe weak," fears MEP Alexandra Geese from the Greens.

These countries wanted to prevent a Europe of nations and a common, strong European policy, says Geese of the German Press Agency.

She has lived in Italy for more than 20 years and finds the development "very worrying".

Meloni wants to strengthen the "Atlantic" connection to the USA - Europe is of secondary importance to her.

"Yes to the sovereignty of the peoples!

No to the bureaucrats in Brussels!” she shouted into the microphone at an event organized by Spain's far-right Vox party in June.

In Italy, many now fear that reforms could be stopped under Meloni, the prerequisites for the complete payment of the 192 billion euros from the EU recovery fund.

The money is urgently needed - but Meloni wants to renegotiate with Brussels.

But even the critics of the 45-year-old are not assuming that the new government will miss out on billions in aid.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-09-16

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