Europe | Charlemagne

Will Giorgia Meloni turn out to be Europe’s Trump card?

The Italian leader is among those angling to be the linchpin of the transatlantic relationship

Giorgia Meloni stands behind a a grey looking Donald Trump and whispers in his ear.
Illustration: Peter Schrank

Generations of Italians have flocked to America in search of opportunity and enchantment. One recent arrival to New York, albeit only for a short trip in September, looked like she had hit upon both. Giorgia Meloni, the Italian prime minister, found herself feted in unique style at a glitzy ceremony on the sidelines of the annual United Nations confab in Manhattan. Bestowing an award upon her was none other than Elon Musk, a peddler of electric cars, rockets and political influence. The world’s richest man declared Ms Meloni “someone who is even more beautiful on the inside than she is on the outside”, among other compliments. Reciprocal flattery ensued: Mr Musk is a “precious genius”, apparently. Pictures of the two staring deep into each other’s eyes soon had tongues wagging. It fell to the entrepreneur’s mother to pour cold water on the rumours: Musk mère had been accompanying her son and could attest he had returned to his hotel alone that night.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Europe’s Trump card”

From the December 7th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

The threat to free speech in Germany

One of the freest countries in the world takes a hammer to its own reputation

Illustration of a statue of a man in a suit stands on a cracked plinth with a raised fissed appearing in the cracks, with graffiti reading "OUT!", "NO", and "JUSTICE!" while crowds with signs gather below

Europe’s streets are alive with the sound of protests

An arc of discontent runs through Serbia and Turkey


Participants from the far right political party Vox are seen marching during the demonstration

Young men in Spain love the hardline Vox

They find the rough populism of the hard right appealing


Power is being monopolised in Ukraine

Critics say the presidency is becoming too mighty, and making mistakes

Trump’s Ukraine ceasefire is slipping away

The American president increasingly looks like Russia’s willing dupe

Russia continues to rain down death on Ukrainian cities

Soldiers can hold the line, but drones and missiles are killing civilians