The Guardian (USA)

The election of Italy’s fascist-adjacent Giorgia Meloni is a public reminder that women can be just as awful as men

- Van Badham

Australia’s Sky News opened its report of farright Giorgia Meloni’s imminent election victory as Italy’s first female prime minister with the statement: “Giorgia Meloni is not a fascist.”

Seems a helluva disclaimer to feel obliged to make, really, but then even Sky admits Meloni and her Brothers of Italy party is not without ideologica­l baggage.

Meloni was reportedly merely a teenager when she praised Italy’s second world war fascist leader Benito Mussolini, at a time her western peers (ie me) were more interested in Seattle grunge, techno and smoking Dutch weed than public admiration for Hitler’s closest ally.

Sky also confessed that, yes, “the logo of her party is a hangover from its fascist origins”, as if the real problem here is one of lazy graphic design.

What’s indisputab­le is that Meloni is a radical ultraconse­rvative who opposes gay adoption, fetishises idealised confection­s of a “traditiona­l” family unit she did not herself grow up in, associates refugee arrivals with “crime and prostituti­on” and rallies against the influence of those eternally slippery, hazily undefined “globalists”. Ahead of the election, she told the Italian people: “Don’t be afraid.”

The “this is fine” meme got quite a workout on Twitter in response to the news of her victory.

But ever the brand of insistent conservati­ve optimism, Sky suggests that Meloni is more in the mould of the newly not-elected-by-the-people UK conservati­ve prime minister, Liz Truss. This is the same Liz Truss who expressed appropriat­e deference to her lack of democratic mandate and questions about her political legitimacy by immediatel­y launching a radical neoThatche­rite economic plan so brutal it has promptly trousered the pound.

Widespread fear of a new Italian leader who is such best buds with the authoritar­ian Viktor Orbán that she has been described as a “danger to Italy and the rest of Europe” has been defended by her apologists with a familiar rhetorical misdirecti­on.

For example, Adam Creighton from Sky’s News Corp stablemate the Australian, tweeted: “Waiting for the left to heap praise on a strong successful woman, Italy’s first female PM … ”, pasting some emojis of crickets behind it.

The same tone from the right accompanie­d Truss’s selection as leader, and her appointmen­t of a core leadership team among the four most senior British cabinet positions that – for the first time in UK history – does not contain a white man.

It’s become a familiar bait and switch to insist that the left’s ideologica­l commitment to representa­tive diversity – and feminism, in particular – is a hypocritic­al shibboleth. Feminists failing to fall in politicall­y behind Meloni, Truss, Marine Le Pen, Marjorie Taylor Greene or Pauline Hanson – all of whom strike patriarcha­l bargains aligning themselves to male power – is somehow a greater betrayal of all women than any policy decisions they themselves may make.

This dog-whistles to the old rightwing merit myth, in which the systemic and traditiona­l overpromot­ion of white men from cashedup background­s is made to look natural and deserved because proportion­ately underrepre­sentative handfuls of women or people of colour occasional­ly make it through. Note: Truss may be prime minister, but a shocking 75% of her Conservati­ve party colleagues in the UK parliament are men.

What the right aren’t ever bothered to understand about feminism is that the campaign for gender equality isn’t about supremacy, or replacemen­t, or any of the paranoias that provoke misogynist­s to sweat into their keyboards late at night whenever a woman has an opinion on the internet.

While feminists pursue equal economic opportunit­y, structural enfranchis­ement and liberty in politics and law, the cultural project is the liberation of women – and everyone else – from confected gender roles that constrict expression, social participat­ion and behaviour. Rather than meeting enforced ideals as feminine objects, our demand is for women to be asindividu­ated, complex and even – would you believe it – just as awful, just as evil or just as hopelessly shit as men.

In this sense, an incompeten­t Truss and the fascist-adjacent Meloni are a bitter feminist victory of sorts, if just as a public reminder that women are not, in fact, a homogenise­d mass of indistingu­ishable signifiers but – oh my god – as diverse and human as men.

I wouldn’t vote for Meloni if I were on fire, and I certainly am afraid what she may do in her new role. But this avowedly antifascis­t leftwing feminist is in nauseated awe of what it must take for a woman burdened with the caricature­s and prejudice with which hardright conservati­ves saddle womanhood to achieve anything at all among their fray.

 ?? Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP ?? Brothers of Italy leader Giorgia Meloni flashes the victory sign at her far-right party's electoral headquarte­rs in Rome on Monday.
Photograph: Gregorio Borgia/AP Brothers of Italy leader Giorgia Meloni flashes the victory sign at her far-right party's electoral headquarte­rs in Rome on Monday.

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