Salvini’s
far-right League party is ripping apart
Italy’s
deputy prime minister is struggling to contain a spat with his own deputy, a
maverick former general who is threatening to form a rival party.
February
3, 2026 4:00 am CET
By Hannah
Roberts
https://www.politico.eu/article/matteo-salvini-far-right-league-italy-roberto-vannacci/
ROME —
Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini faces a battle to save his
far-right League party from electoral oblivion.
The
party’s internal crisis exploded into public view last week after Salvini’s
maverick deputy, Roberto Vannacci, an ex-general and defender of fascist
dictator Benito Mussolini, threatened to form a splinter party to the right of
the League called National Future.
Salvini
seeks to play down the split with his No. 2, but Vannacci’s move revealed
starkly how the League — a key part of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s
right-wing ruling coalition — risks disintegrating as a political force before
next year’s elections.
Current
and former party members told POLITICO that Salvini’s rift with Vannacci had
exposed a deeper and potentially devastating factional struggle at the heart of
the party — between moderates and extremists, and over whether the League
should return to its roots and seek northern autonomy from Rome.
In the
short term, weakness in the League could bring some relief to the Atlanticist,
pro-NATO Meloni, who is prone to irritation at the anti-Ukrainian,
Kremlin-aligned outbursts of Salvini and Vannacci, who are supposed to be her
allies. In the longer term, however, the party’s full implosion would
potentially make it harder for her to build coalitions and to maintain Italy’s
unusually stable government.
Public
feud
The
tensions between Salvini and Vannacci became impossible to disguise last month.
On Jan.
24 Vannacci registered a trademark for his new National Future party. He later
distanced himself from an Instagram account announcing the party’s launch, but
hinted on X that he could still turn to social media to launch a party when the
time was ripe. “If I decide to open such channels, I will be sure to inform
you,” he said.
By Jan.
29 Salvini was in full firefighting mode. Speaking before the stately
tapestries of the Sala della Regina in Italy’s parliament, he insisted there
was “no problem.”
“There is
space for different sensibilities in the League … we want to build and grow,
not fight,” he added, vowing to hold a meeting with Vannacci to set the
relationship back on course.
Many in
the League are more hostile to Vannacci, however, particularly those alarmed by
the former paratrooper’s placatory language about Mussolini and Russian leader
Vladimir Putin. A powerful bloc in the League that is more socially moderate —
and deeply committed to northern autonomy — is pressing for Salvini to take the
initiative and fire Vannacci, according to two people involved in the party
discussions.
Daniele
Albertazzi, a politics professor and expert on populism at the University of
Surrey, said a schism looked imminent. “[Vannacci] is not going to spend years
building someone else’s party,” Albertazzi said. “It’s clear he doesn’t want to
play second fiddle to Salvini.”
From
asset to liability
Vannacci
emerged from obscurity in 2023 with a self-published bestseller “The World Back
to Front.” It espoused the Great Replacement Theory — a conspiracy that white
populations are being deliberately replaced by non-whites — and branded gay
people “not normal.” More recently he has stated he prefers Putin to Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Albertazzi
said Vannacci was positioning himself on the extreme right. “You can see it
even in the typography of his symbol [for National Future], which evokes the
fascist era,” he said.
Salvini
originally identified the military veteran as a lifeline who could reverse the
League’s flagging fortunes.
Salvini
had early success in transforming the League from a regional party “of the
north” into a national force, and it won a record 34 percent of the Italian
vote in the 2019 European elections. But by 2022 things were souring, and
support collapsed to about 8 percent in the general election. Vannacci was
brought in to broaden the party’s appeal and shore up his own leadership.
The
gamble initially paid off. In the 2024 European elections, Vannacci personally
received more than 500,000 preference votes — roughly 1.5 percent of the
national total —validating Salvini’s strategy.
But
Vannacci has since become a liability. He was responsible for a failed regional
campaign in his native Tuscany in October and has flouted party discipline,
building his own internal group, opening local branches and organizing rallies
outside the League’s control, operating as “a party within a party.” In recent
interviews Vannacci has increasingly flirted with the idea of going solo with
his own party.
For the
traditional northern separatist camp in the League, Vannacci has gone too far.
Luca Zaia, head of the Veneto regional assembly, a towering figure in northern
politics, and three other major northern leaders are now demanding privately
that he be expelled, according to two League insiders.
“His
ideas are nationalist and fascist, and have never been compatible with the
League,” said a party member, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive
internal disputes. “The writing is on the page. Since the first provocation it
has been clear that it is only a matter of when, not if, he starts his own
party.”
An
elected League official added: “Now if he gets votes it’s Salvini’s fault for
giving him a ton of publicity. No one had heard of him before. He basically won
the lottery.”
Attilio
Fontana, a senior League official who is president of the Lombardy region, said
Vannacci’s actions raised questions for Salvini.
“I think
that if inside the party there are differences, that can enrich the party. But
creating local branches, holding demonstrations outside the party, registering
a new logo and website, this is an anomaly … these are issues that [Salvini]
will be looking at,” he told reporters in Milan on Friday.
Every
vote counts
There’s
no guarantee any party Vannacci launches will be a success. Three leaders in
his “World Back to Front” movement — seen as a precursor to his National Future
party — quit on Friday, issuing a statement that described a lack of leadership
and “permanent chaos.”
But his
party could upset the political landscape, even if he only peels off relatively
minor support from the League. Meloni will have a close eye on the arithmetic
of potential alliances in the run-up to next year’s election, particularly if
left-wing parties team up against her.
Polling
expert Lorenzo Pregliasco of You Trend, which is canvassing a potential new
party led by Vannacci, said it had a potential electorate on the right of the
coalition of about 2 per cent, among
voters who had supported [Meloni’s] Brothers of Italy, League voters and
non-voters with an anti immigrant, anti-political correctness stance, who are
attracted by Vannacci’s outspokenness.
The
potential party “poses some risks for Meloni and the coalition … It’s not a
huge electorate but in national elections two points could make the difference
between winning and not winning, or winning but with a very narrow majority
that could mean you were not able to form a government.”
Vannacci
“has been clever in putting himself forward as a provocative opinion leader and
converted this into electoral success … He has the potential to be a strong
media presence and central to political debate.”
The
northern separatist Pact for the North movement, led by former League MP Paolo
Grimoldi, said Salvini’s reputation was now damaged because of the faith he put
in Vannacci.
While
Salvini could resign and support an alternative figure such Zaia as League
leader, this was extremely unlikely, Grimoldi told POLITICO. “If not, there
aren’t tools to get rid of him before the next election,” he added.
“The
result will be political irrelevance and electoral defeat [for the League].”
.jpeg)

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário