Italian PM faces popularity test in regional votes

POLITICS

Lazio and Lombardy, Italy’s two most populous regions, will vote on Sunday and Monday in elections seen as the first popularity test for Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s three-month-old government.

Published: 9 February 2023 09:19 CET

Italian PM Giorgia Meloni is set to face her first popularity test since the September 2022 elections. Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP

Candidates backed by Meloni’s hard-right coalition are expected to triumph in elections to choose a new president and assembly members in Lombardy, Italy’s northern economic powerhouse, and Lazio, which includes the capital Rome.

Local issues will play a part, but “these elections represent a test for the government in the sense of how they are interpreted politically”, said Jean-Pierre Darnis, a political expert at Nice and Rome’s Luiss universities.

READ ALSO: Why do Italy’s regional elections matter – and who can vote in them?

“The right seems ahead, and that will be presented by Giorgia Meloni as a continuation of the momentum of September,” when her far-right Brothers of Italy party came top in national elections, he told AFP.

However, the vote will be closely watched for signs of tensions between Meloni and her coalition partners – Matteo Salvini’s League and Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia.

The rise of the Brothers of Italy has been largely at the expense of its right-wing allies and, while Attilio Fontana, the League’s candidate, is expected be re-elected president of Lombardy with the coalition’s support, Meloni’s party is expected to secure the most votes.

Weakening Salvini?

Meloni’s party made history by securing 26 percent in September’s legislative elections, after which Meloni became Italy’s first female prime minister, at the helm of the most right-wing government in Rome since World War II.

After a campaign dominated by anti-immigrant rhetoric, she has clamped down on migrant rescue charities operating in the central Mediterranean, but she has followed a more conventional line on international affairs.

Despite her euro-scepticism and often strident nationalism, Meloni has maintained ties with Paris and Berlin, while strongly backing the EU’s support for Ukraine following Russia’s invasion.

Brothers of Italy is currently polling at more than 29 percent, according to a YouTrend survey published on February 2nd, compared to 8.7 percent for the League and seven percent for Forza Italia.

READ ALSO: Political cheat sheet: Understanding the Brothers of Italy

Her coalition has also benefitted from a splintered opposition nationwide, with the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) in search of a leader.

In Lombardy, president Attilio Fontana, a member of Salvini’s League and the candidate of Meloni’s coalition, is expected to be re-elected for another five-year term.

A January poll found Meloni’s party well ahead in the region, at around 25 percent, compared to barely 13 percent for the League.

Further south in Lazio, right-wing candidate Francesco Rocca is expected to win in the face of a divided opposition, replacing the Democratic Party’s Nicola Zingaretti, who resigned after being elected to parliament last year.

But Franco Pavoncello, a professor of political science at Rome’s John Cabot university, said the elections are unlikely to destabilise the government.

“I don’t think the result in Lombardy could weaken Salvini,” who has already seen his party trounced by Brothers of Italy in the national elections, Pavoncello said.

Salvini is also claiming success after cabinet ministers voted earlier this month to back more regional autonomy, even if the measure may not be implemented for years, if at all.

Italy’s regions enjoy a high level of autonomy, including over transport, healthcare and education, but the League – once named the Northern League – is pushing for more.

The results of both elections are expected from Monday evening onwards.

By Ljubomir Milasin

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