Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
AFP
AFP
World
Ella Ide in Rome and Jerome Cartillier in Brussels

Italy's far-right PM Meloni to meet EU chiefs

Far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has vowed to put Italy's interests first . ©AFP

Rome (AFP) - Italy's far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni meets EU chiefs in Brussels on Thursday for the first time since her election, with the energy crisis expected to dominate the agenda.

Nationalist Meloni has vowed to put Italy's interests first, and the trip will be closely watched amid fears of turbulent relations ahead between Meloni's populist government in Rome and the bloc's powerhouses.

"The voice of Italy in Europe will be strong: we are ready to confront the big questions, starting with the energy crisis, working together for a solution to help families and businesses to halt speculation," Meloni tweeted on Thursday. 

Meloni's tone towards Europe has been more conciliatory in recent months despite once calling for Italy to scrap the euro, but in a book to be published on Friday she slams "a Europe that is invasive in small things and absent in big matters".

In her first international trip since taking office, Meloni meets European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, European Council chief Charles Michel and European Parliament speaker Roberta Metsola.

It will be the first face-to-face encounter since von der Leyen angered Italy's right-wing parties ahead of the September general election by warning of consequences should the country veer away from democratic principles.

But Meloni, the first woman to become Italian prime minister and head of Italy's most far-right government since World War II, will arrive in Brussels on a diplomatic rather than war footing, political analyst Lorenzo Codogno told AFP.

Treading carefully

"Meloni is pragmatic and wants to be perceived as a moderate and mainstream leader," he said.

The leader of the eurozone's third-largest economy is expected to stress the urgency of European measures to reduce sky-high energy prices, a battle begun by her predecessor Mario Draghi.

"The real focus will be on energy...the most urgent issue with winter around the corner," Codogno said, adding Meloni will be determined "to show continuity with the Draghi government".

Draghi joined other countries in calling for bloc-wide solutions to the energy crunch aggravated by the war in Ukraine, rather than Germany's controversial go-it-alone approach.

Meloni, too, has insisted the continent's worst energy crisis in decades should be dealt with "at an EU level".

The trip "will have no immediate practical consequences", Italy's Messaggero daily said, but it will help Meloni gauge "what the prospects are" for help from the bloc on the country's most pressing issues.

For their part, EU chiefs hope to use the meeting to "understand better what Meloni intends to do", said Sebastien Maillard, director of the Jacques Delors Institute.

'No interest in picking a fight'

"Beyond messages of appeasement" -- in which Meloni pledged support for NATO and the West and distanced her Brothers of Italy party from fascism -- "she has remained rather vague about her intentions", he said.

Brussels will be treading carefully, wary of pushing Meloni towards other nationalist governments in Hungary and Poland.

There is unlikely to be a showdown over the EU's post-pandemic recovery fund, which is funnelling almost 200 billion euros ($197 billion) to Italy on the condition that it implements major reforms.

While Meloni has said she wants to "adjust" the plan to take into account the rising cost of energy and raw materials, those tweaks -- if they come -- will likely be dealt with on a technical level, Codogno said.

Maillard agreed that "on economic issues (Meloni) has no interest in picking a fight with Brussels".

"If she were to step out of line with Europe, it would be against Italian interests".

But Brussels is unlikely to avoid a clash at some point soon over immigration, a hot-button issue for the right in Italy, which has long been a frontline entry point for migrants to Europe.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.