Giorgia
Meloni’s American reckoning
With its
low defense spending and trade surplus with America, Italy was always bound to
clash with Trump. Their spat can now help Meloni’s re-election hopes.
June 23,
2026 4:02 am CET
By Hannah
Roberts
https://www.politico.eu/article/giorgia-meloni-donald-trump-italy-us-american-reckoning/
ROME —
U.S. President Donald Trump’s America First agenda was always going to set him
on a collision course with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Although
the transatlanticist right-wing Meloni had traded for years on the idea that
she was Trump’s most natural European ally and could act as intermediary for
his relations with the EU, Italy had no way to avoid MAGA’s blacklist.
Meloni
aligned with Trump on topics such as migration and the culture war, but it was
only a question of time until MAGA cried foul over Italy’s low defense spending
and major trade surplus with the U.S.
In fact,
Italy was precisely the sort of country Trump habitually complains about for
free-riding on U.S. security guarantees. “Given the radical collision of U.S.
and European interests, a clash was always on the cards,” said Daniele
Albertazzi, professor at the University of Surrey and author of several books
on Europe’s radical right.
Although
the fight was always coming, it was uncertain how Meloni would respond. Unlike
most world leaders who have brushed off Trump’s personal slights, the
pugnacious Italian premier ultimately took the unusual step of escalating the
dispute, skewering the American leader for impugning Italy’s national dignity.
After
Trump mocked Meloni on Friday for allegedly “begging” him for a photograph at a
recent meeting of the G7 leading economies, and accused her of exploiting their
relationship for domestic political gain, she shot back that he had invented
the incident and said her own popularity was suffering because of her
friendship with him.
The
intensity of her response was carefully politically calibrated in a country
where Trump is roundly hated, and where Meloni faces re-election next
year. An Ipsos survey in May found 77
percent of Italians had a negative view of Trump.
Her
coalition partners in the center-right Forza Italia party have supported her,
seeing the compelling political logic of standing up to Trump.
Foreign
Minister Antonio Tajani, leader of Forza Italia, called Trump’s words “grave
and offensive” and cancelled a trip to the U.S. scheduled for early this week.
That
doesn’t mean Meloni is escaping criticism. The opposition center-left
Democratic Party said she was wrong to think she could ever harness Trump.
For Lia
Quartapelle, a foreign affairs spokesperson for the Democratic Party, the
dispute has exposed the folly of relying on a privileged relationship with an
unpredictable Washington that “weaponizes our dependence on the U.S. against
us.”
The
incident should prompt Meloni to invest more heavily in European alliances, she
added. The Italian leader “didn’t
understand that Trump doesn’t have allies; he thinks of the world as a place of
great powers and their subjects.”
Quartapelle
continued that the clash signaled a broader shift in relations between the
Italian right and MAGA, which could now look to “very dangerous” figures such
as extreme-right General Roberto Vannacci as a more natural ally.
The
turning point: Iran
After
Trump’s re-election, Meloni cultivated ties with the White House and was
presented as a bridge between Washington and Brussels.
The Iran
war changed that mood music.
Trump’s
decision in February to launch military action against Tehran proved deeply
unpopular in Italy, where voters worried about rising energy prices and the
risk of a wider conflict, making Meloni’s perceived closeness to the White
House “a huge liability,” Albertazzi said.
Trump’s
attack came after Meloni had already begun putting distance between herself and
Washington, refusing access to Italian bases for U.S. bombers.
From the
perspective of Trump’s supporters, the problems run deeper than Italy’s trade
surplus.
Ben
Harnwell, the international editor for Steve Bannon’s War Room TV show, said
the White House had been increasingly irritated by Meloni’s efforts to present
herself as an intermediary between Washington and Europe.
“What
really upset those around the president was that she was spinning herself as a
bridge between the U.S. and Europe,” Harnwell said. Trump “doesn’t need an
interlocutor. He can make a phone call to anyone who matters, without Giorgia
Meloni’s help.”
Harnwell
said Meloni’s positions on defense spending and her defense of Pope Leo XIV —
another of Trump’s sparring partners — would also have been noted in MAGA
circles. Trump’s public attack, he argued, was intended to send a message.
By
speaking to an Italian network, “Trump clearly wanted to humiliate her in front
of her own people,” he said.
The
attack was too demeaning to ignore, Albertazzi said. “She had to push back
because I think the political price [of not reacting] would have been too
high.” Trump had treated her “as frivolous, like a fan. As a nationalist she
needs to preserve an image of somebody with dignity and strength.”
Yet
Harnwell cautioned against interpreting the dispute as a permanent break.
“Trump
doesn’t bear grudges,” he said. “You can fall out with him and come back in the
tent as long as you recognize he is the alpha.”
Even so,
he suggested Italy’s importance inside the White House should not be
overstated.
“They
don’t spend much time thinking about Italy in the White House or about any
country other than America,” he said. “If the prime minister of a middling
European power won’t take his calls, he’ll get by.”
No other
option
Despite
the potential electoral advantages to Meloni of a high-profile bust-up with
Trump, Rome is showing little genuine sign of abandoning its broader strategic
alignment with Washington.
Despite
canceling this week’s trip to America, Tajani insisted he will still attend
America’s 250th anniversary July 4 party in Rome — celebrations that are highly
important to Trump.
Claudio
Borghi, senator for the far-right League party in Meloni’s coalition, argued
that Rome should have aligned more closely with Trump’s goals for Europe from
the outset, including by pursuing bilateral tariff negotiations with Washington
rather than acting through Brussels.
He
advised the government to “make every effort from today to diplomatically
overcome this unfortunate situation.”
Leo
Goretti, political scientist and associate dean of the Rome Business School,
said that behind the public rhetoric, Italy was as reliant on the transatlantic
alliance as ever.
Meloni’s
“very tough initial response doesn’t affect Italy’s policy, which is still
trying to cling to the transatlantic relationship,” he said.
“The
government tried to play tough but realized it can’t play tough.”
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