Von der Leyen tried to make friends with Meloni.
It backfired.
Italy’s leader is too far to the right for the
European Commission chief’s coalition allies.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has
spent a year courting right-wing Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni as a
potential partner on the European stage. |
MAY 30,
2024 4:01 AM CET
BY BARBARA
MOENS AND HANNAH ROBERTS
https://www.politico.eu/article/ursula-von-der-leyen-giorgia-meloni-italy-eu-election-far-right/
It was
always going to be a risky relationship.
European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has spent a year courting right-wing
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni as a potential partner on the European
stage.
But in the
last week, it has blown up in her face.
On the eve
of the European election, von der Leyen’s center-left coalition partners in
Brussels are threatening to block her from a second term running the EU’s
executive if she cooperates with Meloni, who they consider to be too far to the
right. Right on cue, French far-right leader Marine Le Pen actively courted
Meloni for an alliance this week.
“In trying
to create a bridge with the hardline right, von der Leyen exposed herself to
criticism from the center-left,” said Leo Goretti of the Institute of
International Affairs think tank in Rome.
“It gave
her a political profile, which might not be appealing to her allies. As we say
in Rome, he who enters the conclave as a pope, exits as a cardinal.”
The
European Commission chief has spent a lot of time in Italy. Von der Leyen and
Meloni have surveilled an entry point for migrants to Italy — and the bloc
offered condolences to flood-ridden communities and joined in when Meloni
discussed her expanded political strategy on the African continent in Rome.
“It was a
classic example of keeping your friends close and your potential enemies
closer,” said one EU official, who, like others quoted in this piece, was
granted anonymity as they were not allowed to speak freely.
The
connection between Meloni and von der Leyen — who in recent days have appeared
to be more like frenemies than friends — looks to be fraying, so much so that
it has become a political liability for von der Leyen in her pursuit of a
second term as European Commission chief and for her party’s aim to maintain
the power balance of the next Parliament — and the European Union. For now, the
two are engaged in a perilous dance, trying to keep up appearances and at the
same time not offend those in their own ranks.
That’s
ironic, given the perceived closeness was a purely political strategy,
according to political insiders.
For von der
Leyen, the stakes are particularly high.
“It’s about
survival, while for Meloni it’s not vital. She’ll still be prime minister
afterwards,” said Goretti.
An unlikely connection
From the
outside, it was an unlikely friendship.
Von der
Leyen, a former German defense minister, has embraced her role as EU chief
executive since 2019 as a bastion of mainstream conservatism, touting her
vision (and a deal) for a climate-neutral continent, managing a cost of living
crisis, working through a pandemic, and heralding pan-European support for
Ukraine through the Russian invasion.
Since
becoming prime minister in 2022, Meloni has led a right-wing Italian
government, pushed to impose more influence over the state broadcaster, and
championed a crackdown on migration.
In the
beginning, the potential payoff of being close to Meloni seemed like a big one
for the European Commission chief.
While the
center-right European People’s Party, home to von der Leyen’s German Christian
Democrats, is the largest group in the European Parliament, the groups to its
right are poised to surge after the election, according to polls.
The
implications were win-win: von der Leyen would have a backup if her current
coalition of socialists and liberals didn’t get enough votes in the European
Parliament election, and Meloni could strategically throw herself and her
right-wing group of European Conservatives and Reformists into the next
coalition mix.
Politically toxic
Von der
Leyen has not ruled out working with the ECR, which includes Meloni’s Brothers
of Italy, after the election. ECR’s members of the European Parliament are
generally staunchly Euroskeptic, standing further to the right than von der
Leyen’s centrists.
The
socialists and the liberals, who are part of von der Leyen’s current coalition
in Brussels, are increasingly attacking von der Leyen on this potential
cooperation as she eyes a second term in charge. So much so that they’ve
threatened to torpedo a second term if she chooses to cooperate with Meloni or
the ECR.
Von der
Leyen also made herself vulnerable to criticism from her own party.
When von
der Leyen visited Rome for a campaign stop earlier this month, even Italy’s
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, who is vice president of her EPP, avoided
public appearances with her. Within the ranks of Italy’s Christian democrats
there were fierce discussions about distancing themselves from von der Leyen,
with one senator describing her as a “lame horse.”
Meloni, on
the other hand, is trying to keep her base happy without attacking von der
Leyen.
During an
event organized by Spain’s far-right Vox party earlier this month, Meloni said
“the outcome of the European elections could spell the end of unnatural and
counterproductive majorities.” She did not name von der Leyen directly, though
the reference was very much about the Commission chief’s coalition in Brussels.
After all,
Meloni needs the Brussels powers that be.
During the heated Italian EU election campaign,
Italy’s far-right leader and Meloni’s coalition partner Matteo Salvini has been
bashing Meloni for her close ties with von der Leyen. |
Italy has
the second highest public debt in Europe after Greece and its annual deficit
exceeds the EU’s limit. This sets Rome up for a clash with the European
Commission, as the EU’s new set of fiscal rules will force Brussels to punish
countries with large deficits. According to the International Monetary Fund,
Italy’s public debt will reach about 140 percent of GDP in 2024 and is expected
to continue rising.
During this
term, Rome also benefited from a good relationship with Brussels.
“For Meloni
it was useful because the principal policies at international and European
level, such as debt and immigration, all begin from the Commission and
therefore she had every advantage in negotiating and meeting with her,” said
Marco Valbruzzi at the University of Naples Federico II.
During the
heated Italian EU election campaign, Italy’s far-right leader and Meloni’s
coalition partner Matteo Salvini has been bashing Meloni for her close ties
with von der Leyen. Yet the Italian prime minister is deliberately keeping her
options open, including potential cooperation with Europe’s most prominent
far-right leader, Le Pen.
Game over?
By showing
their cards so early on in the campaign, von der Leyen and Meloni risk taking
more blows than benefits out of the relationship.
The other
European capitals, big and small, are watching the pair with increasing
scrutiny, asking: Will Meloni really suddenly become the kingmaker of the next
European top jobs carve-up and swing the EU policy to the right?
The EU, and
especially its top jobs puzzle after the European election, has historically
been led by the fabled Franco-German engine. But that engine has been
sputtering in recent years, and the difficult personal relationship between
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz doesn’t
help. It leaves a power vacuum that Meloni at times, for example on swinging
the EU’s migration policy more to the right, has successfully filled. She has
also been a key bridge figure in convincing Hungarian leader Viktor Orbán to
sign up for the EU’s support of Ukraine.
But it
doesn’t make Meloni the ultimate European kingmaker, four European diplomats
and officials said. First, the EPP is set to remain the biggest political force
in the European Parliament. Second, Russia’s full-scale invasion has turned the
tables on the political weight of Eastern Europe. Europe’s eastern countries
are increasingly putting their foot down on getting more political influence in
Brussels, both in support for Ukraine and in future job portfolios.
The
officials pointed, for example, to the revival of the so-called Weimar Triangle
composed of Paris, Berlin and Warsaw since the return of the EPP’s Donald Tusk
to the European Council table.
With all
eyes on Meloni, the real dealmakers after the election may be found elsewhere,
said another EU diplomat. “Everybody’s saying that Italy’s the kingmaker but
Meloni’s strategy won’t matter in the end.”
Barbara
Moens reported from Brussels. Hannah Roberts reported from Rome. Jacopo
Barigazzi contributed reporting from Brussels and Clea Caulcutt contributed
reporting from Paris.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário