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Fear of a shift to the right: Italy votes, the world fears

2022-09-25T04:04:16.201Z


Fear of a shift to the right: Italy votes, the world fears Created: 2022-09-25Updated: 2022-09-25, 06:00 The ballot papers for the parliamentary elections are being prepared. © Alessandra Tarantino/AP/dpa Italy elects a new parliament: the right is clearly favoured. This is particularly worrying abroad. Many Italians are worn down by politics. A very low voter turnout threatens. ROME - Europe


Fear of a shift to the right: Italy votes, the world fears

Created: 2022-09-25Updated: 2022-09-25, 06:00

The ballot papers for the parliamentary elections are being prepared.

© Alessandra Tarantino/AP/dpa

Italy elects a new parliament: the right is clearly favoured.

This is particularly worrying abroad.

Many Italians are worn down by politics.

A very low voter turnout threatens.

ROME - Europe and the world are watching with anticipation Italy, where a new parliament will be elected today.

After the resignation of the previous head of government, Mario Draghi, the country faces a hard jolt to the right.

According to experts, a legal alliance can look forward to a comfortable victory and an absolute majority in the new parliament.

The future government could be led by Giorgia Meloni.

She is head of the nationalist, EU-critical, and partly racist party Fratelli d'Italia, which according to polls is likely to be the strongest force.

A good 51.5 million Italians are invited to vote.

Polling stations are open from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.

After that, forecasts and projections should make it clear later that night what the future parliament will look like.

Meloni has been the only significant opposition to Draghi's multi-party government, and Fratelli has steadily risen. A few months ago, it received the most approval in polls for the first time.

It is possible that the “Italian brothers” in the legal alliance will get more votes than the right-wing populist Lega of ex-Interior Minister Matteo Salvini and the conservative Forza Italia of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi combined.

The political rivals of the left and center parties mostly attacked each other in the election campaign instead of taking joint action against the strong right-wing bloc.

This caused anger among Italians - a historically low voter turnout is expected.

Meloni and Co. are worrying Brussels and other international partners.

The Fratelli want to renegotiate EU treaties and take away influence and power from the Union in favor of the nation states.

Berlusconi and Salvini's formerly close ties to Vladimir Putin have led critics to fear that Italy may want to dilute support for Ukraine and sanctions against Russia.

Meloni, however, repeatedly said clearly that she would remain at Kiev's side.

Although the country under Draghi was doing well given the circumstances - corona pandemic, consequences of war, energy crisis - Meloni managed to fly high in the opposition.

She was able to win over many who were dissatisfied, such as opponents of vaccination or war.

In addition, some Italians think that after the next failure of a government, the 45-year-old Roman woman should try it.

For many, the other parties and politicians are relics of the past and have already failed.

Four former Prime Ministers (Berlusconi, Enrico Letta, Matteo Renzi, Giuseppe Conte) ran in the election campaign.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-09-25

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