Italy's League party, low in polls, picks a provocative candidate for European Parliament election
Italy's League, a junior party in the government, is putting forward a provocative candidate for European Party elections
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Your support makes all the difference.He was fired by the defense minister after writing a book deemed offensive to women, gays and Blacks. He is under investigation by Rome prosecutors for allegedly inciting racial hatred. He set off a firestorm over suggestions that disabled children be taught separately at school.
And on Tuesday, Gen. Roberto Vannacci, one of Italyās most experienced army generals, joined Italyās deputy premier and leader of the right-wing League party, Matteo Salvini, as the Leagueās headline candidate for upcoming European Parliament elections.
Salviniās gamble to put the provocative Vannacci out front for the June 6-9 vote is something of a Hail Mary pass for the League, which has hemorrhaged support in recent years to the more hard-right Brothers of Italy party of Premier Giorgia Meloni.
By taking advantage of the media storm over Vannacci, Salvini is trying to breathe new life into his party, a junior partner in Meloniās government, analysts said.
āMatteo Salvini has a party in crisis,ā said Lorenzo Castellani, a professor of political history at Romeās Luiss university. He noted that the League took 34% of the vote in 2019 European Parliament elections, and today is polling no more than 8%.
āHe (Vannacci) has become a media personality whom Salvini is using to try to have some more support, letās say a few tens of thousands more votes that this general could bring the League,ā Castellani said in a telephone interview.
Vannacciās candidacy has dominated Italian political discourse, headlines and newscasts for days and drew a standing-room only audience Tuesday at Romeās Hadrianās Temple, an ancient Roman temple-turned-conference center not far from parliament.
Officially, Salvini was presenting his new memoir-manifesto āAgainst the Wind: The Italy that Doesnāt Surrender.ā But the event represented the first Salvini-Vannacci outing, and Vannacci used it as a campaign stop to outline his views on migration, Europeās Christian roots and the need to defend Europeās borders.
He lamented, for example, that the official poster of the Paris Olympic Games, an artistic rendering of the French capital, doesn't feature any crosses atop the HĆ“tel des Invalides. Their absence created a brief controversy last month in France when the poster was unveiled.
āUnfortunately, all these symbols that should inspire us a sense of belonging have been erased, blurred, diluted, almost as to give an image that Europe should look more like a bunch of junk, where everyone is included but no one feels like they belong,ā Vannacci said Tuesday.
Vannacci led Italian troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya ā and before that in the Balkans, Rwanda and Somalia ā and was awarded the U.S. Legion of Merit in 2018 for his leadership against the Islamic State group.
But Italyās defense minister fired him in August as head of the militaryās geographical institute, and later disciplined him, after he self-published āThe World In Reverse,ā a manifesto in which Vannacci let loose on his beliefs about LGBTQ+ people, the environmental lobby, multiculturalism and migration.
āGen. Vannacci expressed opinions that discredit the army, the defense ministry and the constitution,ā Defense Minister Guido Crosetto tweeted at the time, announcing disciplinary action against him for having written the book without his superiorsā authorization.
In February, Rome prosecutors opened an investigation into alleged incitement to racial hatred, Italian news reports said. And this week, Vannacci kept the outrage alive, on the left and right, by telling La Stampa newspaper that disabled children should be taught separately in schools.
āThis has nothing to do with freedom of opinion, but is offensive to the history and culture of our country,ā said Sandra Savino, a regional leader of the center-right Forza Italia in Fruili Venezia Giulia.
Salvini has defended Vannacciās right to express his opinions and accused the media of taking his comments about disability out of context. On Tuesday, he said he approached Vannacci after the firestorm over his book in the summer, and the two hit it off.
He said he didnāt share all of Vannacciās ideas, but said Vannacci doesnāt share all of his, either.
Vannacci, for his part, said he knew he was taking a risk by publishing his book, but believed he owed it to his children to speak his truth and now fight in politics for them.
āI wanted to give them a better future, a better Europe,ā he said.
Salviniās choice has divided the League, with its more center-right base opposed to the more hard-right choice that Vannacci represents.
Castellani, the Luiss professor, said such internal dissent underscored the problems the League is facing and risks that Salvini might be replaced.
āSalvini is creating a media personality, which might be an opportunity for him,ā he said. āBut a personality is always dangerous because he can become a political adversary, or he can become embarrassing or voters can get bored with him.ā