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Faced with a disunited left, the coalition led by the leader of Fratelli d’Italia should win a majority in the National Assembly and in the Senate.
By Quentin Raverdy
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TThroughout the day, the sky above Rome will have been undecided. Sometimes unleashed by driving rain, sometimes soothed by a gentle sun. Should we see an electoral omen, wonder some residents? In nothing. At nightfall, in the ballot boxes, there was no room for hesitation, the voters of the beautiful country have made a clear choice: to bring the extreme right to the top of the votes for the first time in the history of the young Italian Republic.
With approximately 25% of the votes – figures still provisional –, Fratelli d’Italia (the Brothers of Italy, a post-fascist party) thus imposed itself as the main party in the country and propelled their leader, the Roman Giorgia Meloni, to the Palazzo Chigi to succeed Mario Draghi as President of the Council. And thus become the pr…
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