High-flying
Meloni bets big on a referendum
The
Italian prime minister is leading the country’s most stable government for
years — but a nationwide vote on judicial reform next month could backfire.
February
18, 2026 4:00 am CET
By Hannah
Roberts
https://www.politico.eu/article/giorgia-meloni-referendum-judicial-reform-italy/
ROME —
Italy’s right-wing Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is taking a big gamble by
holding a referendum on judicial reform next month that could puncture her aura
of invincibility.
For now,
Meloni looks like an unstoppable force in Rome and Brussels, leading the most
stable government Italy has seen in years.
That
makes the March 22-23 referendum a high-stakes maneuver. A win would cement her
grip on power, and reinforce her image as politically invulnerable, but the
vote could equally backfire.
Referendums
in Italy can easily morph into votes of confidence in the government, and
Meloni will be acutely aware that former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi had to
step down after a failed referendum on constitutional reform in 2016.
By
seeking to overhaul the justice system, Meloni is venturing into one of Italy’s
most combustible arenas, laying herself open to accusations that she is
interfering in a fiercely independent judiciary, which right-wingers have often
attacked for leftist bias.
It’s a
bitter debate with a long political heritage. Italy’s right is still smarting
over landmark corruption cases that purged the Christian Democrat establishment
in the 1990s and the ghost of Silvio Berlusconi, the former playboy prime
minister and billionaire media tycoon who died in 2023, looms large over the
vote. He complained that the 35 criminal cases against him were motivated by
left-wing judges and magistrates, whom he slammed as a “cancer of democracy.”
For
decades, however, most governments have been wary of major restructuring of the
legal system. But Meloni is now ready to move.
Her
supporters say the reforms proposed in March’s referendum will modernize a
judicial system that is often criticized as slow, politicized and
unaccountable, bringing it more closely into step with other European models.
In
practice, the changes sought are very technical. They address how judges and
prosecutors are governed, hired and disciplined, separating their career paths
and restructuring judicial oversight bodies.
By
elevating those questions into a flagship cause and taking them to the ballot
box, Meloni has transformed this technical shake-up into a direct test of her
authority.
Modernization
or revenge?
For Vice
Justice Minister Francesco Paolo Sisto, the reform is long overdue.
Disconnecting judges from prosecutors, he argued, would strengthen fairness and
public trust in the courts.
“A
defendant who enters the courtroom knowing that his judge has no ties to the
prosecutor will be reassured,” Sisto told POLITICO. “I’ve never seen a referee
from the same city as one of the teams.”
Critics,
however, see something more insidious. They reckon the reform looks less like a
neutral push for modernization, and more like an attempt to weaken judicial
independence and increase political control over prosecutors.
That
perception is reinforced by the government’s increasingly confrontational
rhetoric toward the courts.
Defense
Minister Guido Crosetto has accused parts of the judiciary of acting as
political “opposition” to the government, while Deputy Prime Minister Matteo
Salvini, who has repeatedly faced prosecution over his hard-line migration
policies, routinely casts judges as politically motivated and disconnected from
public sentiment.
Meloni
herself has often framed judicial rulings as obstacles to her agenda. At a
January press conference, she blamed court decisions for undermining her
attempts to pass tougher law-and-order measures, asking: “How can one defend
the security of Italians if every initiative meant to do so is systematically
annulled by some judges?”
To her
opponents, that is exactly the sort of language that fuels the impression the
reform is more about trying to assert dominance in a decades-long power
struggle rather than striving for courtroom efficiency.
Tension
between Italy’s judicial and political classes dates back to the Mani Pulite
(Clean Hands) prosecutions of the early 1990s, when prosecutors exposed a vast
corruption network that wiped out an entire generation of politicians. On the
right, that purge hardened into a lasting grievance: The belief that the
judiciary is an unelected political actor, with unwarranted moral high
standing.
That was
only compounded by the seemingly endless legal sagas around Berlusconi.
Former
prosecutor Piercamillo Davigo, who was part of the Mani Pulite team, has no
doubt the reform was a political attempt to tame the judiciary. “It’s an
attempt to control the judiciary as in Italy they are strong and really
independent, not ruled by politicians,” he told POLITICO. “This reform will be
damaging to independence and weaken [the] power of courts, giving government
more power as government controls the disciplinary court.”
Davigo
rejected the government’s claim that judges obstructed policy for political
ends, arguing that courts were instead enforcing legal constraints, including
European law, on government initiatives such as plans to send migrants to
processing centers in Albania.
Opposition
leaders echo that critique. Giuseppe Conte, leader of the populist 5Star
Movement, said the reform did little to address chronic delays in the justice
system and instead formed part of a broader institutional power grab.
“The real
goal is to divide and rule,” Conte told POLITICO, accusing the government of
seeking a justice system “that no longer disturbs those in command.”
Invincible
or vulnerable?
The risk
for Meloni is not legal or procedural, but political. Justice reform pits
Meloni against a vocal and well-organized constituency with deep roots in the
state. Similar proposals floated during Berlusconi’s first government in the
mid-1990s triggered protests and contributed to the collapse of his coalition.
Successors drew a lesson: avoid the fight.
Meloni’s
decision, unforced by Brussels, market pressure or crisis, can be partly
explained by her personal trajectory. She entered politics during the upheaval
of the 1990s, and carries no personal baggage from that era. She is operating
from a position of strength, leading a stable government and canvassing well.
Polls
suggest the gamble is finely balanced. Recent surveys show opponents of the
reform slightly ahead, though awareness of details remains low. A recent poll
by YouTrend forecast a win for opponents of the reform if turnout is low, with
51 percent voting against, whereas with higher turnout, the supporters of the
reform would win, by a margin of 52.6 percent to 47.4 percent. A poll by SWG
found 38 percent of the electorate supported the reform versus 37 percent
against, with 25 percent undecided.
Lorenzo
Pregliasco, of the YouTrend polling agency, described the vote as an
“unprecedented challenge” for Meloni. Mobilizing opposition, he noted, was
often easier than building support for a complex reform, and center-left voters
have historically been more reliable in turning out for referendums.
Meloni
could attempt to politicize the vote, turning it into a plebiscite on her
leadership. But that strategy carries risks of its own. She has instead sought
to distance herself from the outcome, stressing that she would not resign in
the event of defeat.
Even so,
she will have to take ownership of the result. “If you’re the prime minister
and you put a reform to a referendum, it’s inevitably also a vote on your
government,” Pregliasco said.
If she
wins, the government could build on that momentum, and even attempt to force
early elections, according to political analysts and polling experts such as
Pregliasco. Meloni said in January that early elections “are not on her radar.”
But
equally the opposition could be revived by a defeat of the proposed reform,
opening up the field in elections scheduled for 2027. If Meloni loses, she
would no longer be seen as “invincible” said Pregliasco.
“Her
image as an effective and decisive winner would be damaged, and the political
climate would change.”
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