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The key to Giorgia Meloni's resounding success
The key to Giorgia Meloni's resounding success

Spectator

time02-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Spectator

The key to Giorgia Meloni's resounding success

Giorgia Meloni has emerged as one of the most significant politicians in Europe since she became Italy's first female prime minister in October 2022. I Am Giorgia, already a bestseller in Italy, is her account of how a short, fat, sullen, bullied girl – as she describes her young self – from a poor, single-parent family in Rome managed to do it. Her explanation is that she refused to play the victim, and found iron in her soul – even if, as she admits, she has never found happiness. It is an amazing story: how she transformed from an ugly duckling into the swan who is now a familiar figure on the largely male-dominated world stage, and whose humour, charm, friendliness and no-nonsense talk make her such a refreshing change. When she became Prime Minister, aged just 45, most media commentators dubbed her the 'far right heir of Benito Mussolini'. Her aim, they said, was to dismantle democracy, since she and others in the Fratelli d'Italia (FdI) were once in Italy's long-dead post-fascist party. She has not done so, and the party she co-founded in 2012, and defines as conservative, is more popular now than when the right-wing coalition she leads won the general election. That is almost unheard of for a party in government in the West. It is even rarer in Italy, where, since the fall of fascism in 1945, there have been 69 governments. Meloni's insistence that Italy should be close to America – very different to most European leaders' default position of resentment – led to a close rapport with Joe Biden, and continues now with Donald Trump. Biden saw her as a 'good friend' and Trump, who thinks her 'a fantastic woman', phones her when he wants to talk to Europe. It helps that she speaks good English, which, she tells us, she taught herself as a teenager, listening to pop music on her Walkman during long bus trips to and from school (a favourite was Michael Jackson). She dreamed of being an interpreter, and did well at school, but could not afford university. The title of the book is taken from an impassioned speech that Meloni gave in October 2019 at a right-wing coalition rally in Rome, when she bellowed: They want to call us parent 1, parent 2, gender LGBT, citizen X, with code numbers. But we are not code numbers… and we'll defend our identity. I am Giorgia. I am a woman. I am a mother. I am Italian. I am Christian. You will not take that away from me! The speech, which captures the essence of her politics, was so talked about it made her a social media star and caused support for the FdI to surge. It was even turned into a disco dance track designed to embarrass her, but which instead became a smash hit that made young people warm to her. At the May general election the year before, the party had received only 4 per cent of the vote; but at the 2022 general election it got 26 per cent – much more than any other party – and is now polling 30 per cent. This book, first published in Italy before Meloni came to power, avoids virtually all mention of Mussolini and fascism – which I understand, but I think is a mistake. Meloni should have spelled out why she and her party, despite their roots, are conservative. She might have written more, too, on how she has been inspired by the late Roger Scruton – whom she calls 'the prince of British conservative thought'. And she could have outlined the key differences between conservatism and fascism, which are too often falsely lumped together, owing to the still dominant Marxist view of fascism as a bourgeois counter-revolution. I would also have liked more on why Meloni and the Italian right in general since the 1970s are so besotted with J.R.R. Tolkien. Why do they identify with hobbits in the idyllic little world of the Shire, while outside the mustering forces of evil prepare to engulf them? As a youth member of the post-fascist party, Meloni and her companions would stage hobbit plays in the park, in which she invariably took the role of Sam Gamgee, her favourite Tolkien character. 'He's just a hobbit – a gardener by trade. Yet without him Frodo would never have competed his mission,' she writes. Perhaps the key figure in Meloni's life is the father she barely knew, whose name – Francesco – she even refuses to write. He was an accountant and abandoned her mother Anna, her elder sister Arianna and herself when a baby. Francesco had wanted Anna to have an abortion (still illegal in Italy in 1976); but on her way to the backstreet clinic, Anna changed her mind. Meloni was born thanks only to her mother's decision to defy her father. He then sailed off in a yacht to the Canary Islands to open a restaurant. (It later emerged he received a nine-year jail sentence in 1995 for drug-running.) The two sisters would fly out to visit him in the summer holidays, but he showed them no love, and, aged 11, Meloni decided not to see him again. When he died 'a few years ago… I felt nothing', she writes. But it made her realise 'just how deep the black hole was I had buried my pain in – the pain of not being loved enough'. It was her father's emotional, not physical, abandonment that drove her rise to the top – because she would then spend her life 'competing with men (not with women), seeking their approval, friendship… all of it because of that wound'.

Italy Could Be Forced To Grant Citizenship To 2.5 Million Foreigners After June Referendum
Italy Could Be Forced To Grant Citizenship To 2.5 Million Foreigners After June Referendum

Gulf Insider

time16-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Gulf Insider

Italy Could Be Forced To Grant Citizenship To 2.5 Million Foreigners After June Referendum

Italy will hold a referendum on June 8-9 to decide whether to halve the waiting period for foreigners applying for Italian nationality, the government announced on Thursday. If approved, the reform would reduce the required residency period to five years, potentially granting citizenship to around 2.5 million foreign nationals. The referendum was triggered after opposition parties and pro-migrant organizations, including Oxfam Italia, collected more than 500,000 signatures last September, meeting the legal threshold for a public vote. Despite strong opposition from the ruling Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, the government was obligated to set a date for the vote after a ruling from the Constitutional Court in January approved its admissibility. Currently, foreigners must reside in Italy for at least 10 years before applying for citizenship through naturalization. Children born in Italy to foreign parents are also unable to obtain citizenship until they turn 18. Proponents of the reform argue that the existing system is restrictive and out of step with other European countries such as Germany, the U.K., Spain, and Portugal, where the naturalization process typically takes five years. In France, naturalization is permitted after two to five years, depending on individual circumstances. The proposal has sparked a heated debate within the Italian government. Prime Minister Meloni, who came to power in 2022 on an anti-migration platform, has consistently opposed changes to the nationality law, calling the 10-year requirement 'an appropriate length of time for nationality.' Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, leader of the co-governing League Party, shares this stance. However, the issue has created tensions within the governing coalition. Antonio Tajani, leader of the center-right Forza Italia party and also a deputy prime minister, suggested an alternative proposal last year to grant Italian nationality to children who have completed a continuous 10-year education in the national school system, rather than waiting until they turn 18. However, this idea was never formalized into legislation. Reviewing the proposal earlier this year, Italy's top court noted that the change would only affect the required residency period for foreign nationals to apply. Other conditions for naturalization, including a minimum B1 level in Italian, continuous and legal residency in the country, and the absence of a criminal record, will still apply. For the proposal to pass, voter turnout must exceed 50 percent +1 of the Italian electorate and be supported by a simple majority. Proponents of the change had called for the vote to be held on the same day as administrative elections on May 25-26 to ensure greater turnout. However, the government had the power to choose to hold the vote on another day. 'We had requested that there be a combination with the first round of the administrative elections and the referendum on May 25-26. Obviously, the road is now,' noted Riccardo Magi, spokesperson for the Citizenship Referendum Committee. He added the work starts now to rally students and those more likely to support the bill to register to vote. 'We have just over 80 days to break the wall of silence. Students must know that they must register and must communicate 35 days before the date of the vote their desire to vote not in the place where they are resident but in the place where they are domiciled.'

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