Pressure
builds on Italy’s Meloni to shun Trump as she gears up for 2027 election
Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is facing severe political pressure to distance
herself from U.S. President Donald Trump as her administration maneuvers through economic challenges
ahead of Italy’s 2027 general election.
While Meloni
originally positioned herself as a crucial transatlantic "bridge" to
the MAGA movement, shifting domestic realities, fiscal bottlenecks, and public
opinion are forcing a strategic pivot away from Washington.
The Core
Dilemma: Military Spending vs. Domestic Aid
The primary
source of friction stems from intense disagreements over defense targets and
public spending allocations:
- The 5% Demand: Donald Trump is pressuring NATO
allies to raise military spending to 5% of GDP by 2035. While
Meloni verbally agreed to this goal, Italy currently struggles to sustain
defense spending at just 2% of economic output.
- The Energy Crisis: Due to the fallout of the war
in Iran, Italian businesses and households are struggling under exorbitant
energy bills.
- Political Backlash: Both opposition and coalition
members argue that funding military assets like tanks is indefensible
while citizens need direct economic relief. Senator Claudio Borghi of the
far-right League noted the immense political difficulty of justifying
defense spending over domestic energy subsidies.
Mounting
Economic and Political Vulnerability
Meloni’s
position has weakened due to consecutive domestic setbacks:
- Stagnant Growth: Critics, including 5Star
Movement Senator Mario Turco, point out that Italy lags behind the rest of
Europe in growth metrics and carries a higher relative debt burden than
Greece.
- Funding Bottlenecks: A high national deficit has
made it incredibly difficult for Rome to leverage the €15 billion in EU
loans intended for defense expansion through the Security Action for
Europe (SAFE) scheme.
- Ebbing Political Capital: Meloni’s government suffered a
notable blow following a failed justice referendum, which re-energized
Italy's center-left opposition parties.
The
Electorate Reality
Meloni’s
strategic pivot is heavily calculated to align with an electorate that remains
deeply skeptical of Trump's agenda. An Ipsos poll revealed that 77 percent
of Italians view Trump negatively. In response, Meloni has enacted
noticeable policy course-corrections, including publicly criticizing the U.S.
president and blocking U.S. military jets from utilizing an Italian airbase.
Despite the
tactical retreat from Washington to secure her base, Meloni continues to defend
the core principle of defense spending, framing it publicly as "the price
of freedom" required to protect Italy's national sovereignty and autonomy

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