ROME — After forging unexpectedly fond ties with U.S. President Joe Biden, Italy's right-wing Premier Giorgia Meloni is poised to leverage a more natural alliance with President-elect Donald Trump that positions her as a key interlocutor between the U.S. and Europe.
Weeks before Trump's inauguration, Meloni met him at his Mar-a-Lago retreat, a visit that she said went ''beyond expectations.'' The trip, she said, "was an opportunity to confirm a relationship that promises to be very solid,'' adding diplomatically, ''I don't know if I can say privileged.''
A strong trans-Atlantic relationship between two conservative governments creates ''an added value, not only for Italy but for Europe as a whole,'' she told journalists this month.
It remains to be seen to whose advantage the relationship will be, with some observers saying that Meloni could either become a Trump whisperer, exerting influence, or a Trojan horse in Europe — for Trump's purposes.
''It's clear that if Trump is looking for a person to call in Europe when in need, Meloni is the one,'' said Franco Pavoncello, political science professor and president of Rome's John Cabot University. ''Around her in Europe, it's a desert.''
Meloni projects stability
Known for its rotating governments that rarely complete full parliamentary terms, Italy is in the unusual position of being the most stable government among major European and G-7 allies, as Germany, France and even Canada struggle.
Meloni has led her once-fringe, post-fascist party from the extreme right to more mainstream positions, especially on foreign policy. She gained ground as a leading political figure in Europe after her far-right Brothers of Italy party scored a sound performance in the EU election last June.