28/05/24View in Browser

The EPP game and Meloni’s challenges

By Sarantis Michalopoulos

Italy’s conservative Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has for months been politically courted by the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) and recently by far-right leader Marine Le Pen.

The EPP wants to use Meloni’s European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group, or rather, its “healthy elements”, to have an alternative majority in the European Parliament.

Should the EU centre-right disagree on a specific policy file within a likely parliamentary coalition with the EU socialists (S&D) and the liberals (Renew), the EPP can seek majorities on the right – and Meloni can offer a solution. 

On the right, Le Pen dreams of a big right-wing bloc in which ECR and far-right Identity and Democracy (ID) groups join forces, becoming the second–largest group in Parliament. 

Several ΕU leaders have described Meloni as “constructive” at EU Council gatherings. This constructiveness will be needed as the post-election challenges will require a lot of skill and manoeuvring.

If a big right-bloc is formed with ECR-ID forces, Meloni’s first challenge will be to ensure its unity.  

Both ECR and ID parties want “national sovereignty” to be boosted, which often makes it more difficult to find common ground on some EU issues. It will be hard for Meloni to offer the EPP a steady and rock-solid bloc. 

A second challenge is the numbers. For Meloni to be able to offer a safe majority to the EPP, her bloc will need to be bigger than the projected 224 seats of the EU socialists and the liberals together.

According to current Europe Elects projections, if all ECR and ID members join forces, they could control 143 seats. With Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party  – currently non-attached – the number goes up to 152, still well below the joint socialist-liberal tally.

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French President Emmanuel Macron (L) waves beside German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (R) from the balcony of the historical city hall, in Muenster, Germany, 28 May 2024. Macron is on a three-day visit to Germany with stops in Berlin, Dresden, Moritzburg and Muenster. He will return to Berlin to take part in a gathering of the French and German governments at Meseberg Palace later on 28 May. EPA-EFE/SASCHA SCHUERMANN

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Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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