Italy's first woman to govern: right-wing extremist Meloni now officially prime minister

Giorgia Meloni is the first woman in Italy to be sworn in as Prime Minister.

Italy's first woman to govern: right-wing extremist Meloni now officially prime minister

Giorgia Meloni is the first woman in Italy to be sworn in as Prime Minister. The party leader of the far-right Fratelli d'Italia took the oath in front of Head of State Sergio Mattarella.

Giorgia Meloni has become the first woman in Italy's history to be sworn in as Prime Minister. The party leader of the far-right Fratelli d'Italia took the oath in the morning before Head of State Sergio Mattarella. The men and women of her cabinet were also sworn in at the Quirinale Palace in Rome. In the future, Italy will be governed by a right-wing government consisting of the Fratelli, the conservative Forza Italia led by ex-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the right-wing populist Lega led by Matteo Salvini.

A handover between the new Prime Minister Meloni and her predecessor Mario Draghi is planned for Sunday in the Palazzo Chigi, and the Council of Ministers will meet for the first time. The cabinet of the 45-year-old Roman woman then needs confirmation by a vote of confidence in the two chambers of parliament, which observers say could happen early next week.

The right-wing alliance has had an absolute majority in parliament since the September 25 election, which is why voting for the new government should not be a major hurdle. In the parliamentary elections in September, Meloni emerged as the clear winner with her Fratelli with 26 percent of the votes. The far-right with fascist roots was previously just a small opposition party in parliament.

The new government is likely to try to restrict immigration. The alliance also emphasized that it wanted to do more for Italy's interests. Meloni's stance on the EU was already causing concern in Europe. She recently declared that Italy will remain fully part of Europe and the Atlantic Alliance. Recently, Meloni was apparently in a hurry: on Friday morning, the legal alliance was invited to government consultations at Mattarella. A few hours later, Meloni came to him again, presented a cabinet draft and accepted the mandate to form a government.

In the days before, the parties in their alliance had been arguing about the occupation of some ministries. This was also overshadowed by pro-Putin statements by the 86-year-old Berlusconi. In the new cabinet, the Fratelli have the most ministers, with nine posts. Lega and Forza Italia received five each. Foreign Minister and Meloni's deputy will be EU politician Antonio Tajani (Forza Italia). Lega boss Salvini is also deputy prime minister and had to be satisfied with the infrastructure ministry. First, he claimed the Interior Ministry, which he headed in 2018 in the Conte government with a tough anti-migration policy. The interior minister is now the prefect of Rome, Matteo Piantedosi - one of five independent experts in the cabinet.

The hard-fought post in the Justice Department went to Fratelli and ex-prosecutor Carlo Nordio. Berlusconi had long struggled to have his confidant Maria Elisabetta Casellati appointed there. She will now become Minister for Reform. Lega politician Giancarlo Giorgetti takes over the important ministry of finance. Fratelli co-founder Guido Crosetto, who was previously criticized for possible conflicts of interest as an entrepreneur in the defense industry, will become defense minister. On Friday he declared that he had already left the management role at every private company.