Italy’s new Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, gave her maiden speech to parliament on 25 October. James L. Newell assesses what the speech told us about Meloni’s priorities and the policy agenda of her government.
On 25 October, Giorgia Meloni gave her programmatic speech to the
Chamber of Deputies, the ‘lower house’ of the Italian parliament. Such
speeches are important, as they are the vehicles through which newly
appointed governments set out their legislative programmes. They are
also the bases on which such governments ask the two branches of the
legislature for confirmatory votes of confidence – votes they are
obliged to obtain as a condition of holding office once they have been
appointed by the President of the Republic.
Such speeches are also a source of clues as to the prospects of the
new government and the ambitions and outlooks of the persons making
them. This is especially pertinent in the case of Meloni given that her
party’s deepest ideological and organisational roots go back to the
neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI), formed in 1946 by survivors
from Benito Mussolini’s Repubblica di Salò. Because of this, in the
immediate aftermath of the election, commentators were busy trying to
work out whether Meloni was a wolf in sheep’s clothing or a sheep in
wolf’s clothing. So, what did the speech tell us?
An uncompromising statement
Giorgia Meloni honoured tradition by confining herself mainly to
statements of aspiration, such as guaranteeing to all Italians ‘a future
of greater freedom, justice, well-being and security’. Politicians
prefer such statements to those implying definite commitments as they
create fewer hostages to fortune and, by appealing to universally held
beliefs and values, are difficult for opponents to question. In the
absence of much that is concrete in them, drawing conclusions about the
political significance of such speeches requires a willingness to
interpret and to read between the lines.
From this point of view, it was difficult to disagree with those for whom the speech was an uncompromising statement of the values of the right.
Fewer than half of Italian citizens voted for the parties staffing her
government. Nevertheless, she began by referring to ‘the clear
indication expressed by the Italian people on 25 September’, going on to
claim that her government is ‘wholly representative of the will of the
people’ – thereby signalling that rather than attempting to be inclusive
and governing through the search for workable compromises, she will
lead a government that will brook no opposition.
Her government will not, she said, shrink from taking decisions,
where necessary, that are unpopular. The only reference to ‘diversity’
came, not in connection with the idea of cultural diversity or
pluralism, but in reference to the right’s frequently made juxtaposition
between ‘European integration’ and ‘nations with ancient histories’
‘each with its own identity’. The theme of protectionism, if not
autarchy was present in references to ‘predatory ambitions threatening
to undermine strategic national industries’; to ‘technological
sovereignty’; to the need ‘to ensure that we are not dependent on
far-away countries to provide food for our children’.
There were no references to the role of international cooperation in
the resolution of problems. Although there were references to fascism
and its anti-Semitic laws as ‘the most dishonourable episodes in Italian
history’, these were by implication diluted by her later condemnation
of ‘the years of political violence’ when ‘in the name of anti-fascism’
‘innocent youths were clubbed to death with spanners’.
Policy commitments
Meloni did make reference to at least four more or less specific
commitments of note. One was the commitment to a constitutional reform
that would give Italy a presidential form of government, to be
introduced by the search for cross-party consensus if possible but which
the government will not back down on in the face of any opposition of
principle. The second was deregulation; the third was a tax amnesty; the
fourth, abolition of the anti-poverty ‘citizenship income’,
significantly framed as a subsidy to people who failed ‘to do their bit
for Italy’. In addition, there was a commitment to additional measures
to stop the arrival of refugees from North Africa, referred to as
‘illegal immigration’ and framed, as ever, as a security issue.
All of this suggests that Meloni has a clear vision of the Italy she
wants to create: an Italy that is economically neo-liberal, socially
conservative, and politically rather authoritarian. Yet there was little
in her vision that was new. Even what was arguably the most radical
aspect of her programme, namely the proposal for constitutional reform,
reflected assumptions from the past. These were long-standing
assumptions among Italy’s political elites that the country suffers from
a governability problem whose resolution requires the adoption of
plebiscitarian principles whereby elections function as mechanisms for
the direct investiture of leaders who thereby acquire the authority to
issue orders....
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