Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Christian mother' guides Italy's far-right to brink of power

EUR -
AED 4.06399
AFN 74.684642
ALL 98.614613
AMD 428.314428
ANG 1.992587
AOA 1052.842468
ARS 1072.968221
AUD 1.606373
AWG 1.991597
AZN 1.87563
BAM 1.950288
BBD 2.232291
BDT 132.117805
BGN 1.955558
BHD 0.417054
BIF 3201.492796
BMD 1.106443
BND 1.423474
BOB 7.638859
BRL 6.041505
BSD 1.105575
BTN 92.664114
BWP 14.432169
BYN 3.618009
BYR 21686.282635
BZD 2.228341
CAD 1.493742
CDF 3172.721635
CHF 0.937816
CLF 0.036225
CLP 999.550067
CNY 7.779735
CNH 7.777628
COP 4672.541947
CRC 573.075206
CUC 1.106443
CUP 29.320739
CVE 110.643632
CZK 25.283218
DJF 196.637203
DKK 7.457759
DOP 66.94579
DZD 146.902308
EGP 53.36629
ERN 16.596645
ETB 130.963903
FJD 2.423329
FKP 0.842622
GBP 0.833544
GEL 3.026102
GGP 0.842622
GHS 17.526081
GIP 0.842622
GMD 76.896219
GNF 9554.694987
GTQ 8.545925
GYD 231.179928
HKD 8.600215
HNL 27.4918
HRK 7.522718
HTG 145.880353
HUF 398.212235
IDR 16844.045527
ILS 4.156076
IMP 0.842622
INR 92.84252
IQD 1448.332929
IRR 46567.417612
ISK 149.901275
JEP 0.842622
JMD 174.028165
JOD 0.784135
JPY 159.146296
KES 142.59692
KGS 93.208199
KHR 4497.962722
KMF 489.378831
KPW 995.798065
KRW 1465.9291
KWD 0.338015
KYD 0.92123
KZT 531.956594
LAK 24097.154758
LBP 98997.158221
LKR 326.257936
LRD 213.909985
LSL 19.131703
LTL 3.267038
LVL 0.669277
LYD 5.234207
MAD 10.792596
MDL 19.296071
MGA 5059.335592
MKD 61.43637
MMK 3593.683677
MNT 3759.693236
MOP 8.851743
MRU 43.738782
MUR 50.918555
MVR 16.98391
MWK 1916.744345
MXN 21.718005
MYR 4.607785
MZN 70.674059
NAD 19.131876
NGN 1845.911731
NIO 40.685383
NOK 11.74508
NPR 148.261646
NZD 1.759488
OMR 0.425957
PAB 1.105496
PEN 4.102967
PGK 4.335785
PHP 62.319262
PKR 306.935345
PLN 4.287837
PYG 8615.80591
QAR 4.029811
RON 4.975787
RSD 117.036276
RUB 106.053094
RWF 1509.02611
SAR 4.151381
SBD 9.167514
SCR 14.770934
SDG 665.523064
SEK 11.368868
SGD 1.425242
SHP 0.842622
SLE 25.279238
SLL 23201.550623
SOS 631.771674
SRD 33.963319
STD 22901.136026
SVC 9.673748
SYP 2779.971139
SZL 19.136263
THB 36.0114
TJS 11.773574
TMT 3.883615
TND 3.366353
TOP 2.591402
TRY 37.857385
TTD 7.499737
TWD 35.256768
TZS 3012.843811
UAH 45.67732
UGX 4055.538314
USD 1.106443
UYU 45.960523
UZS 14085.319637
VEF 4008147.863359
VES 40.80145
VND 27229.562023
VUV 131.359135
WST 3.095233
XAF 654.061213
XAG 0.035272
XAU 0.000416
XCD 2.990217
XDR 0.815879
XOF 654.108371
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.946556
ZAR 19.255368
ZMK 9959.304051
ZMW 28.991967
ZWL 356.274192
  • RBGPF

    3.0600

    63.86

    +4.79%

  • NGG

    0.3520

    70.022

    +0.5%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    24.765

    +0.18%

  • BP

    0.7010

    32.091

    +2.18%

  • RELX

    -0.0850

    47.375

    -0.18%

  • SCS

    -0.2100

    13.28

    -1.58%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.04

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    -0.4850

    40.395

    -1.2%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    24.86

    +0.32%

  • BTI

    -0.2100

    36.37

    -0.58%

  • AZN

    0.7550

    78.665

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    -0.0850

    9.935

    -0.86%

  • BCC

    -0.0650

    140.915

    -0.05%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    34.83

    +0.09%

  • RIO

    -0.1150

    71.055

    -0.16%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    13.53

    -1.03%

'Christian mother' guides Italy's far-right to brink of power
'Christian mother' guides Italy's far-right to brink of power / Photo: Riccardo Dalle Luche - ANSA/AFP

'Christian mother' guides Italy's far-right to brink of power

As a youth activist she praised Mussolini, but as leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy, Giorgia Meloni has sought to detoxify her country's post-fascist movement -- and has brought it to the brink of power.

Text size:

Opinion polls put Italy's right-wing coalition on course to take office after September 25 elections, with Meloni's party on top, making her a strong candidate to be the country's first female prime minister.

Small in stature and with poker-straight blonde hair, the 45-year-old cuts a sharp contrast with the men who normally dominate Italian politics, and both she and her party play heavily on her personal brand.

"I am Giorgia, I am a woman, I am a mother, I am Italian, I am Christian," she famously declared at a 2019 rally in Rome, while campaign billboards are dominated by her smiling face.

Brothers of Italy grew out of the country's post-fascist movement, but Meloni has sought to distance herself from the past, while refusing to renounce it entirely.

In public speeches she is intense and combative as she rails against the European Union, mass immigration -- she wants a naval blockade to deal with boats coming from north Africa -- as well as abortion and "LGBT" lobbies.

She is fighting the election as part of a coalition with Matteo Salvini's anti-immigration League and Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia, but her party is eclipsing them in opinion polls.

- Mussolini made 'mistakes' -

Meloni has benefited from being the only major party to stay out of outgoing Prime Minister Mario Draghi's government over the past 18 months, allowing her to claim she can offer voters a fresh start.

"In general terms, Meloni represents a point of reference for protest, disaffection," said Sofia Ventura, professor of political science at the University of Bologna.

Meloni helped co-found Brothers of Italy in 2012, although they only secured four percent of the vote in 2018, compared to current polling numbers of around 24 percent.

Her own political journey goes back much further.

She was a teenage activist with the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), formed by supporters of fascist dictator Benito Mussolini after World War II.

At 19, campaigning for the far-right National Alliance, she told French television that "Mussolini was a good politician, in that everything he did, he did for Italy".

After being elected an MP for National Alliance in 2006, she shifted her tone, saying the dictator had made "mistakes", notably the racial laws, his authoritarianism and entering World War II on Hitler's side.

Two years later, she was named minister for youth in Silvio Berlusconi's government, at 31 the youngest minister in post-war Italy.

- Fascism is history -

Her party takes its name from the first line of Italy's national anthem and its logo includes the same flame used by MSI, in the green, white and red of the country's flag.

She has refused calls to change the logo, insisting the flame has "nothing to do with fascism" -- and blaming talk to the contrary on "the left".

"The Italian right has handed fascism over to history for decades now," she said in a trilingual video message sent to foreign correspondents this month.

She insists that within her party "there is no room for nostalgic attitudes".

Going further, she said in a recent interview with Britain's The Spectator magazine: "If I were fascist, I would say that I am fascist. Instead, I have never spoken of fascism because I am not fascist."

Born in Rome on January 15, 1977, Meloni was brought up in the working-class neighbourhood of Garbatella by her mother, after her father left them.

Meloni herself has a daughter, born in 2006, with her TV journalist partner whom she has not married.

She speaks English, Spanish and French and has good contacts with other European parties, notably Spain's Vox and Poland's Law and Justice parties.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)