Matteo Salvini. Italy, Europe and the New Right - Alessandro Franzi - E-Book

Matteo Salvini. Italy, Europe and the New Right E-Book

Alessandro Franzi

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Beschreibung

Matteo Salvini is one of the most controversial up-and-coming figures on the European political scene. Since 2013 he has been the leader of Italian Lega - formerly a secessionist party which he himself transformed into the champion of the new nationalist right, a pendulum between Putin and Trump. In 2018 he became both the Vice-Prime Minister and the Minister of the Interior in a coalition government with the populist Five Star Movement.

Accused of racism, Salvini has built his success on the social disorientation created by globalization and on the fear of immigration, using an aggressive and irreverent media campaign. But it’s also thanks to his political ability, developed during his long militancy in the party, which began when he was 17 years old, that he was able to recognize before others the new spirit of the times. According to most people, after the election in 2018, Salvini had in reality become the leader of Italian politics, with the goal of heading the nationalist front in Brussels after the European elections in May of 2019, and then, the next Italian government.

This book is a map that seeks to answer one simple question: who is Matteo Salvini, really?

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e-mail: [email protected]

ISBN: 978-88-3363-190-5

English Translation: Katherine Perunic

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Bloggers and journalists can require a copy of the book writing to Maria Ranieri: [email protected]

Table of contents

Cover

Title page

Colophon

Description

Introduction

Chapter 1 The Politician

In Milan

The Barbarians

Taciturn

Communist

Padano

In Piazza

Chapter 2 The Leader

The radio

Europe

The “Salvini Boys”

The ruckus

The gaffes

Carpe diem

Secretary

Chapter 3 To the Right

Russophile

Nationalist

Post-Fascism

Chapter 4 The Government

With Berlusconi

With the Five Star Movement

Milan-Rome

In power

Chapter 5 The Words

Diciotti

The program

The stage

Facebook

Chapter 6 The Image

On television

The bulldozers

The gut

In uniform

In Conclusion

List of names and places

Description

Matteo Salvini is one of the most controversial up-and-coming figures on the European political scene. Since 2013 he has been the leader of Italian Lega - formerly a secessionist party which he himself transformed into the champion of the new nationalist right, a pendulum between Putin and Trump. In 2018 he became both the Vice-Prime Minister and the Minister of the Interior in a coalition government with the populist Five Star Movement.

Accused of racism, Salvini has built his success on the social disorientation created by globalization and on the fear of immigration, using an aggressive and irreverent media campaign. But it’s also thanks to his political ability, developed during his long militancy in the party, which began when he was 17 years old, that he was able to recognize before others the new spirit of the times. According to most people, after the election in 2018, Salvini had in reality become the leader of Italian politics, with the goal of heading the nationalist front in Brussels after the European elections in May of 2019, and then, the next Italian government. This book is a map that seeks to answer one simple question: who is Matteo Salvini, really?

***

Alessandro Franzi is a journalist. He has written about politics for the agency Ansa in Milan and currently works in the Rai newsroom in Trento. Since 2004 he has focused his attention on the Lega Nord and the eurosceptic movements. Born in 1981 in Varese, where he began writing for the newspaper “Il Giorno”, he has a degree in History. He has published several articles on the LSE blog “Euro Crisis in the Press”.

On Twitter he is @ilbrontolo.

Alessandro Madron is a journalist and videographer. Born in 1978 in Castiglione Olona (Varese), he spent 10 years working as a reporter for local newspapers in his province, the cradle of the Lega. Since 2011 he has been on the staff of “Il Fatto Quotidiano”, where he has written about the transformation of the Lega. In 2012, Editori Internazionali Riuniti published his books: Maroni, una vita da mediano and Roberto Maroni. Barbaro o sognatore? I segreti dell’ascesa di un leader. You can find him on Twitter @alemadron.

Introduction

This is a map that tells the story of where, when and how the persona of Matteo Salvini was born. As with all maps, it has the shortcoming of being concise and essential. But it also has the quality of patiently guiding the reader through the various crossroads in the narrative of one of the most unexpected and controversial figures to have recently emerged on the Italian and European political scenes.

In December 2013, Salvini became the leader of a political party formally known as the Lega Nord for the Independence of Padania, founded by Umberto Bossi, the man for whom Salvini had started to work in politics as an adolescent. From the late ’70s, Bossi had imagined that the wealthy regions of northern Italy should gain autonomy from Rome, so that their taxes would not go to finance the wasteful spending of the poorer regions in the south. By the mid-90s came the secessionist twist: Bossi envisioned the creation of a new independent nation, specifically Padania.

Salvini, who was born on March 9, 1973 in Milan, Italy’s economic capital, had been a fervent supporter of the party line during all those years. He got his Lega Nord membership card in 1990, at the age of 17. In 1993 came his debut in active politics, as a city councilman in Milan. From there followed a long militancy characterized by constant anti-Italian propaganda, which resulted in his becoming the leader of the youth movement within the party.

But that was another era. After the fall from grace of the old leader – which brought an end to the longstanding pact with his ally Silvio Berlusconi – Salvini transformed the Lega into a national and nationalist party, following the shift in political sentiment of the electorate.

With Salvini the Lega’s agenda changed, giving precedence to other issues dear to the party that had long been overshadowed: the fear of Islam and new immigration; unregulated globalization; the risk posed by the European Union to bring about economic and cultural homogenization. During this period 9/11 took place, the economic crisis of 2008 began, Italy experienced the pro-European technical government in 2011 led by Mario Monti, considered a commissioner of the financial markets. And then there was the refugee crisis between 2014 and 2016. The slogan Free Padania, followed by The North First, were in the end replaced by the opposite message: Italians First!

As journalists, we wrote about Salvini starting from 2012 when he began his ascent to the top of the party, on the ruins of Bossi’s leadership which had ended up under legal investigation. We followed him to open air markets, to party rallies, to protests against mosques and Roma camps, to press conferences and backstage at tv interviews. We listened to his supporters and his critics. And at a certain point, we decided to compile all our experiences in an ebook. It was early 2015, and with two major demonstrations in Milan and Rome, the new Lega was showing signs of being able to take root.

While media coverage was dominated by another young politician with the same first name, the Democratic Party’s Matteo Renzi, Salvini continued consolidating his conservative, identity-making, desecrating and xenophobic message. And the Lega was becoming more and more a personalized political party shaped according to his image.

They began calling him a populist, then a sovreignist, and finally a nationalist, which is probably the most appropriate label. In this book, however, Salvini is primarily a militant, because he has never stopped being true to himself in over 25 years of political activity. He represents the perfect protest organizer and the perfect megaphone for announcing emergencies. For his supporters, he is simply “the Captain”.

Ultimately, Salvini has always been the ideal opponent, so much so that he had never held a position in government (not even on a local level) until June 1, 2018, when he became both Vice-Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior. Even as a government official, his approach to politics has remained the same, trapped in a permanent election campaign that divides the world into friends and enemies.

But who is Matteo Salvini? His biography is what you’d expect for a modern-day politician who entered politics after the fall of the Berlin Wall and all the ideologies that it had supported. He grew up in a working-class family in the Giambellino neighborhood in Milan. A failed marriage and a long-term relationship each gave him a child, and a recent break up with a well-known raitv host, Elisa Isoardi, made the tabloids. But this is not too surprising for a man who carries a press pass in his back pocket.

And what is Salvini’s story? Before anything else, it’s important to disprove some myths. First, Salvini is not a new leader: he started in politics when he was 20 years old, and it’s the only job he has had since then. Second, Salvini might have had success thanks to social media, but he is not a product of social media: his school was primarily the radio, and his showcase was television, which is still the most popular means of communication in Italy today. Third, Salvini is not the head of an anti-establishment party, even though he presents himself with that message: the Lega belongs to the Italian establishment, it was part of the national government for the first time in 1994, it has governed important cities and regions, and appointed the executives of state-owned enterprises. What characterizes this new phase is the leader’s chameleon-like ability to fill in all the gaps left by others, but also to understand the social hardships of the times, and the resurgence of an anti-cosmopolitan identity.

So, here is our map, updated in March 2019. In chapter one, Salvini takes his first steps as a politician, in Milan, where he defended some left-wing circles, and ended up leading a list called the Padania Communists. The second chapter traces his rise to leadership in the Lega, achieved thanks to his organizational skills and also because he had been excluded from any government positions. In the third chapter, Salvini reverses his original positions from when he was a youth, and pursues an international alliance with the French right-wing nationalists led by Marine Le Pen; he consolidates his relationship with Vladimir Putin’s party; and he sets out to present himself as the Italian Donald Trump, even seeking ties with post-fascist groups. In the fourth chapter, the Lega is already national and nationalist, and claims its place in the government by making a post-election alliance with the populist Five Star Movement: uniting the oldest and the youngest political groups in the Italian Parliament. In the fifth and sixth chapters, Salvini’s ascent to power is analyzed, ultimately, by means of his mobilization propaganda.