Leaders | Mainstream Meloni

Giorgia Meloni’s not-so-scary right-wing government

Liberal fears have so far proved overblown

Giorgia Meloni, Italy’s prime minister, at her official residence in Rome.
Photograph: Getty Images

People like labels, and it has always been easy to attach them to Giorgia Meloni, prime minister of Italy since October 2022. She has routinely been dubbed a neo-fascist by her political enemies in Italy and by alarmed liberals across Europe. It doesn’t help that her party, the Brothers of Italy, descends in part from a post-war neo-fascist group, or that its party symbol includes a tricolour flame with questionable antecedents. In the run-up to the election she won, the spread between Italian and German government debt widened, owing to fears that she would pick fights with Brussels and maybe even destabilise the euro itself. She might, critics feared, team up with Hungary’s strongman, Viktor Orban, the nationalist right in Poland and Marine Le Pen in France to cause all sorts of trouble. But 15 months in, Ms Meloni seems to be conventional rather than a wrecker.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Mainstream Meloni”

From the January 27th 2024 edition

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