Trump and
Meloni Split Amid Growing Dispute Over Pope and Iran
Prime
Minister Giorgia Meloni was once considered one of President Trump’s closest
European allies. Their friendship now appears in danger.
Jason
Horowitz
By Jason
Horowitz
Jason
Horowitz, a former Rome bureau chief, has covered Prime Minister Meloni for
years.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/world/europe/trump-meloni-italy-iran-pope.html
April 15,
2026
For
years, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy enjoyed leverage as the
right-wing leader who could bridge the gap between Europe and President Trump.
This
week, though, she seems to have decided that Mr. Trump is a bridge too far.
After
suffering major political setbacks because of her association with Mr. Trump,
who is deeply unpopular in Italy and seen as the cause of rising gas prices,
Ms. Meloni seized on an opportunity to extricate herself from a relationship
that had grown domestically and internationally poisonous. After Mr. Trump
launched a broadside on Monday against Pope Leo XIV, Ms. Meloni rallied to the
American pontiff’s defense, saying, “I find President Trump’s remarks about the
Holy Father unacceptable.”
Mr.
Trump, clearly jilted, lashed out at Ms. Meloni, saying in an interview with an
Italian newspaper on Tuesday that he hadn’t talked to her “in a long time,” was
vexed by her lack of participation in the war in Iran and was “shocked by her,”
adding, “I thought she was brave, but I was wrong.” He responded to her
“unacceptable” criticism by snapping, “She’s the one who’s unacceptable.” On
Wednesday, he added in a television interview that with Italy, “we do not have
the same relationship.”
The spat
seemed to be the end of, or at least a low point for, perhaps Mr. Trump’s most
special relationship in Europe.
It is
also another remarkable moment in the career of Ms. Meloni, who has over
decades shifted from teenage neofascist activist to hard-right party leader —
before finally emerging as a pragmatic conservative and the first female prime
minister of Italy.
When Mr.
Trump returned to power last year, many in the European establishment feared
that he would pull her to the far-right extremes. Instead, analysts suggest,
Mr. Trump may have actually pushed her deeper into the Europe mainstream.
“In the
relationship with Trump, she originally thought he could be an asset, and maybe
he was, because she could appear as the person that could mediate between the
rest of Europe and Trump,” said Roberto D’Alimonte, an emeritus professor of
political science at the University of Florence. “But gradually it has become a
liability. I think she took advantage of what he said about the pope to make a
firm statement and take distance. She couldn’t do otherwise.”
At first,
Ms. Meloni’s connection to Mr. Trump had the makings of a beautiful friendship.
In 2018,
when she was still a marginal figure looking for oxygen in Italy’s crowded
populist space, Ms. Meloni invited Mr. Trump’s former top adviser, Stephen K.
Bannon, to be the guest of honor at her political conference, named after a
hero in “The NeverEnding Story.” The next year, she proudly called herself “the
only Italian” invited to speak at the Conservative Political Action Conference
in Washington. She spoke on the same day as Mr. Trump, and from her seat in the
audience gushed about his remarks on social media even as he delivered them.
In 2022,
she said in an interview with The New York Times: “Trump did some very good
things when he was president. For example, in foreign policy, we had no
problems. There were no wars.”
Years
later, when they were both at the height of their power, they seemed to be
hitting it off.
“You don’t
mind being called beautiful, right?” Mr. Trump said to Ms. Meloni at a summit
in Egypt last October. “You are.”
Despite
the public displays of affection, throughout his second term, Mr. Trump has
increasingly put pressure on Ms. Meloni, along with other European allies, to
increase Italy’s military spending and to accept unfavorable trade terms.
She
showed signs of resistance. Last April, as Mr. Trump threatened to raise
tariffs, she said, “I think the choice of the United States is a wrong choice,”
even as she cautioned against retaliatory tariffs from Europe.
Then
things started getting tense. In January, as Mr. Trump increasingly began to
float the idea of taking Greenland, she said, “I don’t believe in the idea of
the U.S. launching military action on Greenland, which I would not agree with.”
Days later, when Mr. Trump walked back his threats, she spoke as someone who
understood him, saying she was “not surprised, to be honest.”
But when
Mr. Trump decided to attack Iran, he did not give Ms. Meloni a heads-up. To her
humiliation, her defense minister was vacationing in Dubai, United Arab
Emirates, at the time and had to be evacuated via military jet.
The war
also led to a spike in gas and electricity prices in Italy. Ms. Meloni, a
populist with a sharp sense of pocketbook issues, understood the political
danger, especially as Italians prepared to vote in a referendum on a crucial
judicial change that she supported.
As poll
after poll showed that Italy did not support the war and did not like Mr.
Trump, Ms. Meloni started speaking out.
“I am
concerned, obviously, because it would be stupid to believe that what happens
even far from our borders does not involve us,” she said on March 2, adding,
“The United States and Israel decided to attack without the involvement of
their European partners.”
Days
later, she made it clear that “we are not at war and we do not want to go to
war.” She dispatched Guido Crosetto, the defense minister who had been marooned
in Dubai, to be even more forceful, saying the attack by the United States and
Israel “certainly happened outside the rules of international law.” She then
added in a speech to Parliament that because the United States had problems
communicating, she couldn’t necessarily endorse the American assessment that
Iranian intransigence had thwarted negotiations over a deal.
Ms.
Meloni has also sought daylight with Israel, previously a key ally. This week,
she announced that Italy would not automatically renew its defense agreement
with Israel “in view of the current situation.”
For all
her effort to distance herself from Mr. Trump’s war, she badly lost the
referendum on the judiciary anyway, after the vote became perceived as a
plebiscite on her own popularity. In an effort to settle scores with those she
believed had done her wrong, she fired a minister and aides whom she held
responsible for the defeat.
But
analysts said that a rupture with Mr. Trump was the breakup that would matter
most to Italian voters. And Mr. Trump’s attack on the pope gave her an opening.
Now,
experts say, Ms. Meloni will have to decide if she wants to go it alone, or
seek closer alliances in the European establishment that she rose to power
bashing.
After an
important European ally, Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, lost power on
Sunday, Ms. Meloni is in need of new friends, particularly as she prepares for
elections in Italy expected next year.
“She’ll
have to get closer to Europe,” Mr. D’Alimonte said. “Now she’s isolated.”
For Mr.
Trump’s part, he complained that she wasn’t the leader he thought he knew.
“She’s much different,” he said, “than I thought.”
Josephine
de La Bruyère contributed reporting from Rome.
Jason
Horowitz is the Madrid bureau chief for The Times, covering Spain, Portugal and
the way people live throughout Europe.



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