Italy confronts its fascist past as the right
prepares for power
Giorgia Meloni is on course to become prime minister.
Her critics say she leads a party infiltrated by fascists.
BY HANNAH
ROBERTS
AUGUST 3,
2022 4:00 AM
ROME —
There are some crimes that come to define a moment in history. The brutal
killing of a Nigerian street vendor in Italy may be one.
The public
discourse over the murder of Alika Ogorchukwu, beaten to death in front of
bystanders in the coastal town of Civitanova Marche, has laid bare the
divisions in society as Italians prepare to vote in a snap election next month.
For some,
the killing is the fault of years of hate-stoking anti-immigrant rhetoric from
politicians on the right, with disturbing echoes of fascism. Others accuse the
left of trying to make political capital out of a tragedy.
The bitter
dispute matters because, according to current polling, it is the
anti-immigration parties on the right of Italian politics that stand to win
most support at the election and form the next government.
At the head
of them all is Giorgia Meloni, leader of the hard-right Brothers of Italy, who
is on track to become the country’s next prime minister after the September 25
vote. It would mark a radical shift in Italian politics, posing potential risks
to the country’s economy after a period of stability under outgoing Prime
Minister Mario Draghi’s steadying influence. There are also fears a right-wing
coalition could weaken European unity at a sensitive time.
Meloni’s
critics say the world should wake up to just how extreme her views really are,
warning of a return to the dark days of 1930s fascism. Media coverage pointing
out that Italy’s new government should be sworn in around the time of the 100th
anniversary of Mussolini’s March on Rome has reinforced the point.
For senior
Democrat Laura Boldrini, a critic and political rival of the Brothers, Meloni
“represents the far right in Italy which has not had a reckoning with its
past.”
Boldrini
said: “Brothers of Italy is infiltrated by declared fascist elements.” The
party “clearly wants a closed society that looks to the past while Italy needs
to look to the future. Medieval times are over.”
Are Meloni
and her tribe truly the heirs to Mussolini’s fascists? And what will they do if
they take power this fall?
The
45-year-old Meloni entered politics aged 15 as an activist in the Youth Front
of the Italian Social Movement (MSI). It is a group that was formed by
ex-fascists after World War II. While it was seen as the presentable arm of the
movement, the MSI maintained links to extremists.
Meloni
later left Silvio Berlusconi’s center-right People of Freedom party in
opposition to its proposed support for technocrat Mario Monti in the 2013 elections,
and founded the Brothers of Italy. The Brothers retain the MSI’s flame symbol
in its logo and have fielded Mussolini’s descendants as candidates — although
even they claim that talk of fascism is outdated.
The party
argues its origins in opposing a non-democratically elected leader show it is
in fact a defender of democracy — the opposite of fascist authoritarianism. The
Brothers of Italy is also the only party that has refused to support successive
unelected governments in the last legislature — culminating in its opposition
to Draghi’s grand coalition.
Meloni said
last year in an interview that there was “no room for those nostalgic for
fascism” in her party.
Raffaele
Fitto, an MEP for Brothers of Italy, said his colleagues remained in opposition
during Draghi’s government “because for us the principle is democracy, that the
people choose. So when they accuse us of fascism, extremism, we can only
respond with a laugh because our actions and choices are exactly the opposite.”
But there
have been controversies. Last year a Brothers MEP was suspended after an
undercover documentary showed him discussing illegal funding at meetings with
extremists who performed fascist salutes and made racist jokes.
And with
the pandemic receding, immigration — the mainstay of right-wing political
movements all over the world — has returned as a key issue in Italian politics.
Naval
blockades
Proposals
published after a Brothers’ party conference in May called for immigrants to be
detained in designated areas until they prove their asylum case, a naval
blockade and fines for NGO rescue vessels.
Meloni’s
ally and likely coalition partner is Matteo Salvini, the hardline
anti-immigration leader of the League party. While he was interior minister in
a previous coalition, Salvini waged a campaign against NGO migrant rescue
vessels. He was put on trial for holding migrants on boats and many of his
efforts to challenge NGO operations were struck down by the courts.
But during
this election campaign, Salvini has already jumped on the issue of illegal
migrants overwhelming a reception center on the island of Lampedusa to make his
case to voters.
Even so,
there are reasons to think that if they do end up leading the next government,
the Brothers’ more outlandish plans may never come to fruition. The party’s
immigration proposals are likely to clash with international, maritime and EU
laws.
Besides,
Italy’s democratic institutions and international obligations may help prevent
it from pursuing dramatic deviations.
“The
narrative that we are fascist is a fairytale,” said Fitto. “And it is bad for
Italy and its reputation abroad.”
Some
academics agree. If Meloni’s right-wing alliance wins power, it would be “the
most right-wing government in the history of the Italian republic,” said
Giovanni Orsina, professor of political history at Luiss University in Rome.
But to typecast Brothers of Italy as fascist or neo-fascist, is a
“misrepresentation,” he added. “You might dislike Meloni and her proposals. But
fascism is just the wrong label.”
Italy’s
international obligations — especially within the EU — leave little space for
radicalism, said Orsina. “That’s one reason a right-wing government is not a
catastrophe, there is little room for maneuver.”
Others
believe the rise of the Brothers could herald an era of right-wing
authoritarianism over time. For Mauro Magatti, professor of sociology at
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in Milan, this won’t be because Meloni is
leading a “fascist” movement, but because she won’t be able to deliver on her
promises to the public.
The
Brothers of Italy is gathering support from poorly educated voters who are in
economic trouble while offering solutions that are unlikely to be achievable,
he said. Instead of turning to the center, voters could seek even harder
right-wing options in the future.
“If a
right-wing government comes to power, Brother of Italy will have to manage the
discontent,” Magatti said. “The fact that their policies are very weak [means]
this inadequacy could unleash unpredictable results.”

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