Italy’s PM Giorgia Meloni announces candidacy at EU election
Italian prime minister vows to ‘send the left into opposition in the EU’ as she declares candidacy in June vote
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni announced on Sunday she will be a candidate at June’s European Parliament elections in a bid to boost support for her Brothers of Italy party, though she will not take up a seat if elected.
The June 6-9 European Parliament vote is a key test of strength for her 18-month-old rightist coalition.
“We want to do in Europe what we did in Italy… create a majority that brings together the centre-right forces and send the left into opposition,” Meloni told cheering party faithfuls at a party conference in the coastal city of Pescara to set out E.U. policies and launch the campaign.
Meloni, whose party traces its roots to Benito Mussolini’s Fascist group, called for Italy to leave the euro zone. Her 2022 election raised concerns in some European capitals.
However, she has followed a broadly pro-European, orthodox line in office, particularly on foreign policy matters such as Ukraine and the Middle East.
Her party is Italy’s most popular with 27% of support, according to recent polls, ahead of the opposition Democratic Party (DP) on around 20% and the left-leaning 5-Star Movement on 16%.
Meloni will be the first name on the ballot for Brothers of Italy in all five of Italy’s constituencies for the E.U. election, but pledged she would not use “a single minute” of her time as prime minister to campaign.
DP leader Elly Schlein announced last week she would also run, as did Antonio Tajani, head of the centrist Forza Italia party which is in the ruling coalition.
All three leaders hope to win votes of people who take little interest in politics but are attracted by names of party chiefs on the ballot.
Source: Reuters
Americas
2 minutes
Harris avoids direct response on Netanyahu, stresses US-Israel alliance
World
1 minute
Ukraine, Netherlands boost military ties with F-16s and $438.8M Drone Plan
World
3 minutes
US faces criticism for double standards on free speech amid pro-Palestine protests
World
2 minutes