sexta-feira, 10 de abril de 2026

As of April 2026, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has notably distanced herself from President Donald Trump’s military strategy in the Middle East, particularly regarding the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

 


Meloni is taking distance from Trump, Israel and the Iran War

As of April 2026, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has notably distanced herself from President Donald Trump’s military strategy in the Middle East, particularly regarding the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. While long considered a close ideological ally of Trump, Meloni has recently shifted toward a more traditional European diplomatic stance focused on de-escalation.

 

Key Strategic Distinctions

Military Non-Participation: Meloni has repeatedly ruled out direct military involvement, stating that Italy "is not at war" and "does not want to enter" the conflict. She notably rejected Trump's demands to send military vessels to the Strait of Hormuz.

Base Restrictions: In a significant move, Italian authorities recently refused to allow U.S. bombers to refuel at military bases in southern Italy (such as Sigonella) for offensive operations against Iran, restricting their use to logistical support only.

Diplomatic Criticism: Meloni has described the U.S.-led military strikes in Iran as part of a "dangerous trend" of unilateral interventions occurring "outside the scope of international law".

Pivot to the Gulf: Seeking to secure Italy's energy interests amid the crisis, Meloni was the first Western leader to visit the Gulf region after the war began, meeting with leaders in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE to prioritize regional stability.

 

Stance on Israel

Meloni’s relationship with the Israeli government has also hardened:

UNIFIL Incident: She labeled Israeli conduct "unacceptable" after the Italian UNIFIL peacekeeping convoy in southern Lebanon came under warning fire from the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) in early April 2026.

Vatican Influence: Analysts suggest her harder tone is partially influenced by growing tensions between the Vatican and Israel following restrictions on Catholic leadership in Jerusalem.

Consistency with Alliances: Despite these criticisms, Meloni maintains that Italy remains "stubbornly Western" and continues to recognize Israel's right to safety, provided actions align with international law.

 

Relationship with Donald Trump

Formerly dubbed the "Trump whisperer" in Europe, Meloni now faces domestic and international pressure as her closeness to Trump becomes a political liability. She has sought to balance her personal rapport with him by insisting that Italy's foreign policy is dictated by 80 years of established Western alliances rather than individual leadership

Italy’s Meloni pivots away from Trump as she looks to reset her premiership

 


Italy’s Meloni pivots away from Trump as she looks to reset her premiership

 

The speech comes after the government lost a referendum on justice reform that many considered a vote on the prime minister herself.

 

April 9, 2026 1:51 pm CET

By Jacopo Barigazzi

https://www.politico.eu/article/italys-giorgia-meloni-pivots-donald-trump-reset-premiership/

 

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni distanced herself from U.S. President Donald Trump during a parliamentary address on Thursday, in a bid to save her premiership after a bruising referendum defeat last month.

 

"The West stands on two legs: the European and the American one. If they don’t move in the same direction, it risks paralysis," Meloni warned, adding that she continued "to believe in the need to work to ensure the unity of the West."

 

The speech comes after the government lost a referendum on justice reform that many considered a vote on Meloni herself. Her allies blame the defeat on rising energy prices caused by the war in Iran and on her friendship with Trump, who is increasingly seen as toxic even on the right.

 

The right-wing prime minister used her address to emphasize publicly her disagreements with the American leader for the first time since he was reelected in 2024.

 

"As is normal among allies, we must clearly say even when we do not agree," Meloni told parliament. She went on to list episodes where she claimed her government stood up to the White House, from tariffs "which we have many times defined as a wrong choice," to defending "the honor of our soldiers in Afghanistan, who had been defined as useless," and protecting Greenland's territorial integrity alongside European allies.

 

The Italian leader also described the war in Iran as "a military operation that Italy did not agree with and did not participate in ... a fact that emerged in all its concreteness with the Sigonella affair," she continued. She was referring — for the first time in a public statement — to Italy's recent decision to refuse permission for a U.S. military aircraft to land at the Sigonella air base in Sicily before flying to the Middle East.

 

Thursday's remarks are a clear rhetorical pivot on her alliance with Trump — who is highly unpopular in Italy — when compared with softer positions earlier this year.

 

Meloni had described Trump's tariffs against the European countries that sent troops to Greenland as a "mistake," but also justified that decision as being caused by a "misunderstanding." She also supported the idea of giving Trump a Nobel Peace Prize.

 

But skyrocketing energy prices linked to the conflict in the Middle East are proving particularly politically dangerous.

 

A Bank of Italy report published on Friday revised down growth forecasts due to "exceptionally high uncertainty," implying that the war in Iran's impact on the Italian energy market and economy could lead to a recession.

 

These constraints make it harder for Meloni’s government to find the resources for its final pre-election budget next year and put money in voters’ pockets.

 

Against that backdrop, she used the speech to revive a proposal already floated by her ministers — and rejected by the Commission — for a temporary suspension of the Stability and Growth Pact if the conflict continues.

 

On Wednesday, Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini said suspending the pact was the government’s "priority" and likened EU debt rules to a "straitjacket." European officials have also begun to signal openness to the proposal. France's European Commissioner Stéphane Séjourné said that the bloc would not rule out greater flexibility in light of the crisis.

Italy's Meloni Withdraws Support From Israel; Backs Lebanon,Slams Netanyahu For 'UNPROVOKED' Attacks

 

The day so far

 


22m ago

17.49 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2026/apr/10/iran-war-live-updates-trump-ceasefire-strait-hormuz-israel-lebanon-hezbollah?filterKeyEvents=false&page=with%3Ablock-69d9230e8f08a86a0e563616#block-69d9230e8f08a86a0e563616

 

The day so far

  • US vice-president JD Vance has warned Iran not to “play” the US as he headed overseas for negotiations aimed at ending their war. Vance, who has long been sceptical of foreign military interventions and outspoken about the prospect of sending troops into open-ended conflicts, set off Friday to lead mediated talks with Iran in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
  •  
  • President Donald Trump has said that US warships are being reloaded with weaponry to strike Iran if talks in Pakistan fail to produce a deal, in an interview with the New York Post. “We have a reset going. We’re loading up the ships with the best ammunition, the best weapons ever made – even better than what we did previously and we blew them apart,” the Post quoted Trump as saying.
  •  
  • Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said on Friday that two previously agreed measures, a ceasefire in Lebanon and the release of Iran’s blocked assets, must be implemented before negotiations begin. In a post on X on Friday, Qalibaf said the steps were part of commitments made between the parties and warned that talks should not start until they were fulfilled, amid mounting disputes over ceasefire terms and continued hostilities in Lebanon.
  •  
  • US negotiators intend to request the release of Americans detained in Iran as part of upcoming talks aimed at ending the war, according to media reports. The Washington Post cited people briefed on the plans in its report.
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  • Iran-backed Hezbollah fired around 30 projectiles from Lebanon into Israel on Friday, the Israeli military said, reporting that some strikes caused damage. Air-raid sirens were activated across northern Israel near the Lebanese border, where Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants have continued to exchange fire despite a truce in the broader conflict involving Iran.
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  • Lebanon’s president Joseph Aoun said on Friday that 13 state security personnel were killed in an Israeli strike on a governmental building in the southern city of Nabatieh. In a statement, Aoun condemned continued Israeli attacks and said targeting state institutions would not deter Lebanon from defending its sovereignty, Reuters reported.
  •  
  • Israel’s foreign affairs ministry announced Spanish representatives will not be allowed access to the US-led centre responsible for monitoring the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip due to what it described as a “blatant anti-Israeli bias”. In a statement on its website, the ministry said the decision was made to block Spain from participating in the Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) in light of “the anti-Israel obsession of [Spanish] Prime Minister [Pedro] Sánchez’s government and its serious harm to Israeli (and also American) interests - including during the war against Iran”.
  •  
  • European airports have said jet fuel shortages could hit the summer holiday season, if oil supplies do not start to flow through the strait of Hormuz within the next three weeks. Airports Council International (ACI) Europe wrote to Apostolos Tzitzikostas, the EU transport commissioner, saying the bloc is three weeks away from shortages.
  •  
  • The Israeli military has claimed to have destroyed more than 200 Hezbollah rocket launchers since the start of the conflict. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement online that it destroyed more than 200 rocket launchers, including approximately 1,300 launch tubes, belonging to the Iran-backed militant group since 2 March.
  •  
  • Keir Starmer said he used a call with Donald Trump to set out the views of Gulf states, the Press Association reported. “I had a discussion with president Trump last night and set out to him the views of the region here, these Gulf states are the neighbours of Iran, and therefore, if the ceasefire is to hold – and we hope it will - it has to involve them,” the UK prime minister said in Qatar, where he was on the final leg of his Middle East tour.
  •  
  • Anwar Gargash, the UAE’s senior diplomatic envoy, said on X that his country will review regional and international ties in light of attacks by Iran to “determine who can be relied upon”. The UAE’s defence ministry said yesterday that its air defences have intercepted 537 ballistic missiles, 26 cruise missiles and 2,256 drones since the start of the war.
  •  
  • The UN children’s agency, Unicef, reported that nearly 600 children have been killed or injured in Lebanon since the outbreak of the latest Israel-Hezbollah war on 2 March. More than 30 children were killed and nearly 150 injured by the wave of bombings carried out on Wednesday by Israeli troops, Unicef said.

Hungary elections: what is at stake and who is likely to win?

 


Explainer

Hungary elections: what is at stake and who is likely to win?

 

Viktor Orbán, an icon for the global far right, could face defeat despite an electoral system weighted in his favour

 

Jon Henley Europe correspondent

Fri 10 Apr 2026 09.46 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/03/hungary-elections-viktor-orban-who-will-win

 

Hungarians go to the polls on 12 April in Europe’s most consequential election of the year, with Viktor Orbán, the country’s illiberal prime minister and global far-right icon, facing possible defeat, after 16 years in power, by a former loyalist, Péter Magyar.

 

What is the story and why does it matter?

The EU’s longest-serving leader, Orbán has since 2010 turned Hungary into what he calls an “illiberal democracy”, declaring himself Europe’s defender of traditional Christian family values against an onslaught of western liberalism and multiculturalism.

 

His four successive governments have comprehensively eroded the rule of law in Hungary, packing the courts with judges loyal to him and turning up to 80% of the country’s media in effect into a propaganda machine for himself and his far-right Fidesz party.

 

He has become the EU’s disruptor-in-chief, battling with Brussels – which has suspended billions of euros in funding – over policies including on justice, migration, LGBTQ+ rights and, more recently, aid for Ukraine, which, along with sanctions against Russia, he has consistently blocked (including the latest €90bn loan).

 

Orbán is the EU’s most Moscow-friendly leader, continuing to buy Russian oil and gas and to meet Vladimir Putin since Russia’s full-scale invasion. Recent allegations that Budapest shared confidential EU information with the Kremlin have sparked EU outrage.

 

Orbán has inspired like-minded EU-obstructive leaders such as Slovakia’s Robert Fico and the Czech Republic’s Andrej Babiš, and boosted nationalist challengers such as France’s Marine Le Pen and the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders.

 

In short, this month’s election will have consequences far beyond Hungary, a country that accounts for just 1.1% of the EU’s GDP and 2% of its population but has, under Orbán, come to play a role on the international stage out of all proportion to its size.

 

Who are the key players and what are their platforms?

Orbán, 62, has been endorsed by Donald Trump, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni, and Alice Weidel of Alternative für Deutschland. US vice-president JD Vance visited Budapest to campaign for him this week and on Friday Trump posted that “I AM WITH HIM ALL THE WAY!”

 

He was an anti-communist youth leader during the cold war and – with funding from his subsequent arch-enemy, the philanthropist George Soros – briefly researched “the concept of civil society in European political thought” at Oxford.

 

His Fidesz party’s 2010 supermajority enabled him to rewrite Hungary’s constitution and pass laws consolidating executive power, curbing NGOs and media freedoms, and severely weakening judicial independence.

 

This year, Orbán has run a classic populist campaign. He has sought to frame the vote as a choice between war or peace, telling voters they can preserve Hungary as “an island of security and tranquility” by electing him, or drag it into chaos and war by choosing Magyar, whom he paints as an agent of Brussels and Kyiv.

 

Polls suggest voters are more concerned with domestic issues such as healthcare and the economy, which has stagnated for the past three years. Food prices have risen to near the EU average while Hungarian wages are the third lowest in the bloc.

 

Magyar, 45, formerly a Fidesz disciple and loyal member of Orbán’s inner circle, burst into the limelight two years ago after his ex-wife, Judit Varga, resigned as Orbán’s justice minister when it emerged that Hungary’s conservative president, Katalin Novák, a key ally of the prime minister, had pardoned a man convicted in a sexual abuse case.

 

Magyar, a former diplomat who trained as a lawyer, distanced himself from Fidesz, accusing it of corruption and propaganda, and launched his Tisza (Respect and Freedom) party. It won 30% of the vote in the June 2024 European elections in Hungary, finishing second to Fidesz.

 

Magyar has pledged to return Hungary to a pro-EU orientation, end its dependence on Russian energy, restore an independent public media and judiciary, boost the economy, halt huge Orbán-era corruption, sanitise public procurement and unlock frozen EU funds.

 

How does the election work and who is likely to win?

Since 2010, Orbán has made hundreds of changes to electoral rules, including nearly halving the number of parliamentary seats to 199 and creating 106 unevenly sized single-member constituencies (the remaining MPs are elected proportionally using party lists).

 

The result is a Fidesz-friendly system, with far fewer votes needed to win in pro-Fidesz districts. Orbán has also made it easier for the mostly pro-Fidesz Hungarians living in nearby countries to vote, and handed policy sweeteners to mostly loyal voter groups such as pensioners.

 

This means Tisza, which has an 8-12 percentage point lead among decided voters in most polls (although pro-government pollsters put the ruling party ahead), may need a six-point win over Fidesz to secure a majority.

 

Polling averages put the opposition party on 50% of the national vote and Fidesz on 39%. However, up to 25% of respondents are undecided, and experts warn that national polling does not reflect the complexities of Hungary’s gerrymandered constituencies.

 

Fidesz is more popular among retirement-age voters, polls suggest, leading Tisza by 50% to 20% in some polls, while Tisza is strongly ahead among under-40s and urban voters. Turnout could reach record heights of more than 80%, pollsters say.

 

What could happen?

Broadly, observers see three possible outcomes: a Magyar majority that Orbán accepts; a Magyar majority that Orbán does not accept; or an Orbán majority. All would come with consequences.

 

For the reasons outlined above, Hungary’s elections can be categorised as free but not fair, and the chances of an Orbán victory cannot be excluded. If he wins, he would almost certainly double down, conflict with the EU would intensify and domestic authoritarianism would increase.

 

If Orbán loses, especially by a narrow margin, he could contest the result. That would place the EU in an entirely unprecedented position and, despite likely opposition from Orbán allies, could eventually lead to the suspension of Budapest’s voting rights.

 

A Magyar victory acknowledged by Orbán would certainly ease EU-Hungary relations, although the opposition leader is hardly a progressive, and Hungarian policy on hot-button issues such as immigration is unlikely to change much.

 

Domestically, moreover, unless Tisza wins a supermajority (133 seats), it is unclear how much a Tisza-led government would be able to do: Orbán has ensured many laws need a supermajority to be changed and has stuffed all major state institutions with loyalists.

Epstein survivors accused Melania Trump of 'shifting the burden' after surprise statement

 


Shrai Popat (now) and Tom Ambrose (earlier)

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2026/apr/10/donald-trump-melania-jeffrey-epstein-iran-inflation-latest-news-updates

 

10 Apr 2026 13.38 BST

From 3h ago

11.23 BST

 

Epstein survivors accused Melania Trump of 'shifting the burden' after surprise statement

Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog.

 

Melania Trump has been accused of “shifting the burden” onto sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s survivors after her extraordinary statement at the White House.

 

In a joint statement released to the media, a group of survivors said the first lady had moved to “protect those in power”.

 

They accused her of “shifting the burden onto survivors under politicized conditions to protect those with power”.

 

The statement read:

 

Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein have already shown extraordinary courage by coming forward, filing reports, and giving testimony.

 

Asking more of them now is a deflection of responsibility, not justice.

 

It added:

 

It also diverts attention from [former attorney general] Pam Bondi, who must answer for withheld files and the exposure of survivors’ identities.

 

Those failures continue to put lives at risk while shielding enablers. Survivors have done their part. Now it’s time for those in power to do theirs.

 

The first lady told reporters on Thursday that she “never had a relationship” with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

 

It was unclear which specific accusations spurred the first lady to respond publicly. She delivered her scripted remarks at a podium in the same room Donald Trump used to address the nation on the war in Iran last week.

 

“I [have] never been friends with Epstein,” Trump said in her statement. “I am not Epstein’s victim. Epstein did not introduce me to Donald Trump.”

 

The first lady went on to say that she and the president were invited to the same parties as Epstein “from time to time” as “overlapping in social circles is common in New York City and Palm Beach”. But she specifically denied that her emails to Maxwell were anything more than “casual correspondence”.

 

In other developments:

 

The push from House Democrats to pass a war powers resolution by unanimous consent failed yesterday, after the pro forma speaker, Republican Chris Smith, did not recognize Democrats. It was always a tall order, given that pushback from even a single member would require Democrats to pursue a formal vote on the resolution.

 

While it’s largely a symbolic move, Democrats in both chambers have vowed to hold votes again when Congress returns from recess next week. On the steps of the US Capitol, lower chamber Democrats appeared confident that when Congress returns from recess next week, they will have at least a couple of House GOP members who are willing to buck their party and pass the resolution.

 

Donald Trump told NBC News that he is “very optimistic” a peace deal with Iran was within reach as a diplomatic delegation led by his vice-president JD Vance prepared to head to Pakistan for high-stakes talks aimed at ending the war this weekend. Iran’s leaders “talk much differently when you’re at a meeting than they do to the press. They’re much more reasonable,” the president said, in line with his administration’s narrative that there’s a disconnect between what Tehran says publicly and privately.

Megyn Kelly Opens Up About Israel, Charlie Kirk, and the Past Nine Months, with Ana Kasparian