Why Meloni's win in Italy not sitting well with former PM Berlusconi

Long-simmering tensions among allies Giorgia Meloni and Silvio Berlusconi have turned nasty in public in recent days. Ms. Meloni says she's determined to form a government with her allies and won't be deterred by posturing.

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AP/Gregorio Borgia/File
Forza Italia's Silvio Berlusconi, left, and Brothers of Italy's Giorgia Meloni attend a rally in Rome, Sept. 22, 2022. Ms. Meloni's resounding victory in Sept. 25 elections isn't sitting well with Mr. Berlusconi, who fancies himself the elder statesman of Italy's political right.

The honeymoon is finished even before any marriage of political convenience in Italy could be formalized.

The resounding victory by far-right leader Giorgia Meloni in the Sept. 25 general election isn’t sitting well with 86-year-old Silvio Berlusconi, the former three-time conservative premier who, four decades her senior, fancies himself the elder statesman of Italy’s political right.

Ms. Meloni is expected to be asked next week by Italy’s president to try to create a governing coalition with campaign allies Mr. Berlusconi and right-wing leader Matteo Salvini and become premier. Behind-the-scenes divvying up of ministries in what would be Italy’s first far-right-led government since the end of World War II started after her Brothers of Italy party took 26% of the ballots cast, more than those won by the forces of Mr. Salvini and Mr. Berlusconi combined.

The knives carving out those cabinet posts are proving particularly sharp.

Mr. Salvini on Saturday issued a sort of call for a truce between Ms. Meloni and Mr. Berlusconi so that three allies’ bid to rule Italy isn’t derailed.

“I am sure that even between Giorgia and Silvio that harmony, which will be fundamental to government, well and together, for the next five years, will return,’’ Mr. Salvini said in a statement released by his anti-migrant League party about the escalating post-election tensions.

A spat between Mr. Berlusconi and Ms. Meloni turned ugly when the former premier and a media mogul scrawled a list of derogatory adjectives about her on stationery emblazoned with the name of his villa near Milan. He positioned it in the Senate in plain view for photographers covering the election on Thursday of the upper parliamentary chamber’s president.

“Giorgia Meloni,” wrote Mr. Berlusconi, jotting down that her ways are “presumptuous, bossy, arrogant, offensive.” A fifth adjective, “ridiculous,’’ appeared to have been scribbled over, said Italian media, who magnified the image.

As much as political differences – Mr. Berlusconi bills himself a staunch champion of the European Union, while Ms. Meloni has said national interests should prevail over any conflicting EU priorities – their spat seemed patriarchal.

“In Berlusconi’s etiquette, the woman is courted and maybe even venerated, but a true male cannot take orders from her, let alone accept that she says ‘no,’’’ wrote Massimo Gramellini in the daily Corriere della Serra, in his front-page fixture that takes aim at political foibles.

By all accounts, Ms. Meloni had vetoed a ministry for a close political aide of Mr. Berlusconi who is one of his several female political proteges.

With his self-described weakness for young women, Mr. Berlusconi has launched the political careers of female lawmakers from Forza Italia, the center-right party he created three decades ago.

Reflecting Mr. Berlusconi’s pique, nearly all of his senators refused to vote for Ms. Meloni’s pick for Senate president, Ignazio La Russa, a long-time fascist nostalgist who helped Ms. Meloni, now 45, establish Brothers of Italy in 2012 as she forged her far-right political ascent.

The Forza Italia boycott delivered a stiff rebuke to her. Ms. Meloni, known for her spunk and sharp tongue, wasn’t blinking.

“It seems like a point was missing among those listed by Berlusconi — that I can’t be blackmailed,’’ Ms. Meloni told private Italian TV La7.

Ms. Meloni already stood her ground during the election campaign. When opinion surveys indicated that she was by far the front-runner over Mr. Berlusconi and Mr. Salvini, those two unsuccessfully tried to wiggle out of long-standing pact that the top-getter in campaign coalitions would become premier should their forces prove victorious.

Together, the leaders’ three parties command a comfortable majority in the newly seated Parliament.

Still, Ms. Meloni needs the forces of Mr. Berlusconi and Mr. Salvini for any viable coalition.

Mr. Salvini chafed for days when it appeared Ms. Meloni wouldn’t let him become interior minister, a post he held in 2018-2019 and used to crack down on migrants arriving by the tens of thousands on smugglers boats or rescue ships. On Friday, Ms. Meloni’s forces backed the election to the presidency of the lower Chamber of Deputies of a League lawmaker, Lorenzo Fontana, an ultraconservative who, like Salvini, has openly admired Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Late Friday, the five-pointed star symbol of the Red Brigades, the extreme left group which terrorized Italy in the 1970s while extreme-right militants were also launching attacks, was scrawled along with Mr. La Russa’s name on a Brothers of Italy neighborhood office. It is the very office where Ms. Meloni cut her political teeth as a teenager in the youth wing of a neo-fascist predecessor of her own party.

Ms. Meloni on Saturday retweeted her party’s description of the vandalism as “clear reference to the dramatic years that we don’t want to live through again and vowed in a tweet to “unite the Nation, not divide it as someone is trying to do.”

This story was reported by The Associated Press.

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