A normalisation of far-right parties dating back to Berlusconi has paved the way for the breakthrough of Brothers of Italy

Giorgia Meloni scored a remarkable success in yesterday’s Italian election – and is all but certain to become prime minister. Her post-fascist Brothers of Italy party’s 26% of the vote makes it the largest party nationally. Overall, the rightwing coalition it now leads will have a considerable majority in both houses of parliament.

Part of the explanation lies in the weakness of the opposition. The eclectic Five Star Movement (15%) and the centre-left Democrats (19%) did not join forces and, after years of failing to improve working-class living standards, were unable to rally the left’s historic base. Turnout was easily the lowest in the republic’s history, with only 64% of Italians voting.

David Broder is the author of Mussolini’s Grandchildren: Fascism In Contemporary Italy

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Australian court finds government has duty to protect young people from climate crisis

Eight teenagers, along with 86-year-old nun, launched case to prevent the approval…

Israeli forces attack Hamas targets in Gaza City as ground war intensifies

IDF spokesperson says military ‘powerfully deployed’ north of Gaza and civilians still…

Scientist calls for curbs on UK arrivals to halt South African Covid variant

Sage professor urges ‘significant reduction’ but says closing borders impractical One of…