Italy’s Meloni has a message for Brussels: I’m
here
After declaring that ‘the good times are over’ for the
EU, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni will try to win over von der Leyen, Michel and
Metsola.
BY HANNAH
ROBERTS AND TIM ROSS
NOVEMBER 3,
2022 4:00 AM
https://www.politico.eu/article/italy-giorgia-meloni-message-brussels-eu/
ROME —
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni will meet EU leaders in Brussels on
Thursday as she tries to win over skeptics in high places, even if she can’t
yet hope to make too many powerful friends.
For the
past few months, Meloni has been trying to paint herself as a moderate and
reliable partner in international relations, attempting to shed her image as a
far-right firebrand with deeply Euroskeptic colleagues.
Yet even as
she tried to present a friendly face toward Brussels, Meloni found her efforts
were not reciprocated by the European establishment.
On the eve
of September’s election, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
suggested Italy’s anticipated far-right government could erode democratic
standards. Then, after Meloni’s victory, French politicians joined in the
critique, provoking her to issue an angry response.
Now, Meloni
has chosen to travel to the heart of the European Union on her first foreign
trip since taking office. Instead of visiting Hungary or another country with a
fellow right-winger in charge, she’s heading to Brussels in what her allies
believe sends an important signal of goodwill from Rome to the EU’s high
command.
“The trip
itself is the message,” one insider from Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party said.
On
Thursday, she will meet von der Leyen along with President of the European
Parliament Roberta Metsola and Charles Michel, president of the European
Council.
The major
points of discussion will be the energy crisis, pandemic recovery plans and the
Ukraine war, according to a spokesman for the European Commission.
Meloni is
expected to push for a common EU response to sky-high energy costs, which have
tripled in Italy for families.
Europe
Minister Raffaele Fitto said on Italian television Tuesday that Europe needed
“a united EU response” to address speculation and keep the prices down. “But
that’s not enough,” he added. “We need to recover resources in discussion with
the EU Commission.”
One method
could be to create a program of EU shared debt to finance energy aid for
families and businesses. It is an idea that has been proposed by Italy’s EU
Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni. But Germany and the Netherlands are opposed.
Italy’s
economic context will weigh heavily on her conversations in the Belgian capital.
She is expected to pledge her willingness to cut the deficit and will also want
to find out what room for flexibility there is on Italy’s deficit next year, so
she can work out which of her coalition government’s expensive election
promises she can afford to keep.
In Italy’s
favor is that its quarterly growth is higher than France and Germany and its
GDP debt ratio has improved thanks to inflation.
One point
of friction is likely to be Italy’s pandemic recovery plan. Meloni wants to
fine-tune the agreement between Rome and the EU, in light of the war in
Ukraine, allocating more funds to energy security and supply and diverting cash
to cover increased costs of raw materials.
The
Commission has already indicated that it is not prepared to be flexible on the
recovery plan, and Meloni’s visit seems unlikely to change that. Commenting on
the discussions on Wednesday a Commission spokesman said: “Naturally Ukraine
will be part of discussions as will the necessity of carrying out that recovery
plan, which Italy is already working on.”
Meloni
wasn’t entirely flattering to the EU during her election campaign. In comments
pitched to her domestic electorate, she warned that “the good times are over”
in Brussels and that she was ready to assert Italy’s interests in Europe. In a
forthcoming book, she criticized Europe as “invasive in small things and absent
in large matters.”
European
leaders won’t have forgotten either that she voted against the launch of rule
of law proceedings by Brussels against allies Poland and Hungary.
But there
is likely to be more common ground on Ukraine. Since the outbreak of the war,
Meloni has been unwavering in her support for Kyiv and has confirmed that the
government will continue to support EU sanctions.

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