Meloni has insisted that Italy’s national interests would prevail over European Union policies.
The ascent of Giorgia Meloni is remarkable considering her humble background in a country where family ties often trump merit.
This weekend,Italians go to the polls to elect a new government. Barring a massive turnaround,this will be a government of two major firsts.
As Europe faces the bleak winter of an economic and energy crisis,police officials and crime experts are sounding a new alarm about mafia groups acquiring businesses at risk of default.
Having been convicted of tax fraud,expelled from the Senate and officially barred from public office,his name will once again appear on ballot papers on September 25.
Secret documents with briefing notes about leaders’ wives were found strewn across the street after animals tear apart German leader’s bin bags.
The country now appears headed to an early election and a renewed period of uncertainty for the nation and Europe at a critical time.
Italy’s woes and Germany’s over-reliance on Russian gas are threatening to devastate Europe and tear it apart. This is the week that could shape its fate.
Politicians are scrambling to prevent early elections after Italy’s fragile coalition government split over a vote on economic support for businesses and families.
French President Emmanuel Macron,German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Italian Premier Mario Draghi arrived in Kyiv in “a message of European unity”.
France and Italy are signing a new treaty,keen to navigate together the economic uncertainty,a more assertive Russia,a rising China and a more disengaged US.