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INSIDE ITALY

Inside Italy: Meloni’s European election chances and late-night gelato in Milan

From controversial European election candidates to a row over Milan's noisy gelateria customers, our weekly newsletter Inside Italy looks at what we’ve been talking about in Italy this week.

Inside Italy: Meloni's European election chances and late-night gelato in Milan
Italy's Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni delivers a speech during a campaign meeting for her Brothers of Italy party ahead of the European elections. Photo: Tiziana FABI/AFP.

Election chances

This week, Italy is talking about the upcoming European parliamentary elections in June – or, at least, about the Italian candidates.

There’s not much discussion of the likely results, which seem a foregone conclusion. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party is expected to do well – and in fact to lead the far-right’s election charge in Europe – with Meloni herself standing as lead candidate: she urged voters this week to simply write ‘Giorgia’ on their ballot papers.

Meloni is very unlikely to actually take up a seat as an MEP, since doing so would mean resigning from office in Italy. But her strategy of using her personal popularity to attract votes and boost her party’s chances at EU level isn’t as unusual as it might sound.

In fact, it’s a common tactic used by Italian party leaders and other high-profile politicians: Elly Schlein, leader of the opposition Democratic Party (PD), and Antonio Tajani, the current foreign minister from the Forza Italia party, are also standing in EU elections this year. The trend seems to have been set by (who else?) then-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi back in 2009.

And it works, because a vote for ‘Giorgia’ actually goes to Giorgia’s list – meaning she can pass on those votes to the next candidate from her party. Voters can’t really express a preference for any one candidate on the list, regardless of what they’re asked to write on the ballot.

While the European vote doesn’t technically matter at all to Italian politics, and you can’t always extrapolate much from the results, the predictions this time around seem to reflect the domestic political situation: Meloni’s party enjoys consistent popularity (mostly at the expense of her right-wing coalition partners) and a weakened and divided opposition poses little in the way of a challenge.

For the 2024 EU vote, Meloni’s party already leads the polls in Italy and is predicted to get 27 percent of the vote, ahead of the PD (20 percent) and the Five Star Movement (16 percent).

So maybe it’s not surprising that Italian media (and social media) has been more interested in discussing the candidates on Meloni’s list – who are far more likely to actually take or retain a seat as an MEP.

There are some very controversial choices among them, including the prominent anti-vax campaigner Sergio Berlato; recently dismissed former culture undersecretary Vittorio Sgarbi, who is currently being investigated over a stolen painting; and hunting enthusiast Pietro Fiocchi, whose family owns an ammunition company, pictured in his election campaign photo pointing a rifle at the camera.

Midnight snacks

One story from Italy you might have seen doing the rounds recently was about a plan by Milan’s city council to “ban late-night snacks” and “outlaw ice-cream after midnight”.

New legislation is reportedly set to come in from May 17th banning the sale of takeaway food and drinks after 12.30am on weekdays and 1.30am on weekends and public holidays, as part of a plan to clamp down on Milan’s rowdy movida (nightlife) and stop crowds of revellers from keeping residents awake.

The plan was widely ridiculed in the Italian and international media as an “anti-ice cream” ordinance – though councillors later clarified that “gelato is not the target” and that the rules would be more on the sale of “drinks, especially alcoholic ones.”

It’s not the first time Milan has considered banning the sale of takeaway food and drinks after a certain time. A similar measure was attempted back in 2013.

But why do so many of these zany-sounding proposals come out of Italy in the first place?

Italy’s decentralised system of government means that regional, city and local authorities can all set their own varying rules on all sorts of issues – which is arguably useful, considering the differing natures and needs of each part of the country.

READ ALSO: Why Italy needs a national plan for sustainable tourism – before it’s too late

But it also means that, in the absence of national laws, local councils and the personalities within them are left to come up with their own creative solutions to problems – even though, quite often, the same problems exist across Italy (and elsewhere).

The suggested local laws that make international headlines tend to be those ones affecting tourism, and there are plenty of these being proposed now as Italian tourist destinations of all sizes are increasingly trying to offset the negative impacts of huge crowds descending each summer.

A small proportion of such rules proposed each year do become reality, which is why we have, for example, the Cinque Terre’s ban on parking on the seafront to take a selfie, or Venice’s rules against eating or drinking while sitting on the ground.

But as the number of international visitors to Italy is only forecast to rise this (and every) year, many people now argue that these local rules just aren’t enough and national regulation is needed on various issues before many Italian towns and cities become unliveable.

There’s no sign though of the government bringing in or discussing any nationwide rules regulating things like short-term tourist lets, much less the opening hours of gelaterie. So headlines about surprising local ordinances are likely to remain a staple of news reporting from Italy for a long time to come.

Inside Italy is our weekly look at some of the news and talking points in Italy that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox, by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

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INSIDE ITALY

Inside Italy: Banning mobile phones in schools and why Italians aren’t having more kids

In this week’s Inside Italy review, we look at how Italy's government and the Catholic church are joining forces to urge Italians to have more children, and whether Italy could bring in a ban on mobile phone use in schools - or does it already have one?

Inside Italy: Banning mobile phones in schools and why Italians aren't having more kids

Italy’s stati generali della natalità or ‘General States of Birth’ conference kicked off at the end of this week, the annual meeting at which pro-life lobby groups and self-described ‘ultra-Catholic’ conservative politicians come together to debate solutions to the problem of the country’s nosediving birth rate, which hit a record low in 2023 after 15 years of decline.

Pope Francis was, as always, the main speaker at the event. On Friday, he pointed to “selfishness, consumerism and individualism” as reasons for the falling number of births in Italy, adding that young couples have “no lack of cats and dogs” – something he has famously complained about before.

But he also recognised that the issue is closely tied to Italy’s economic prospects and what he called a “lack of hope for the future”.

Polls have shown for years that plenty of young couples in Italy would like to have at least two children, but often feel they can’t: financial security (in the form of stable employment contracts, for example), and practical support (such as adequate childcare provision) remain out of reach for far too many.

To reverse the trend, “effective policies are urgently needed,” and governments must commit to making “courageous, concrete and long-term choices,” Francis said.

Many had hoped that Italy’s first female prime minister would be the one to make such choices. But so far, while Giorgia Meloni’s administration talks a lot about being pro-family, it has missed opportunities to begin to address the root causes of Italy’s low birth rate.

Most measures for families in the 2024 budget were aimed at those who already have two or more children and are on a low income – but there was little support for those who are unsure whether they can afford to start a family at all.

And the government’s move to increase VAT on nappies and infant formula this year could be seen as sending the wrong message altogether.

KEY POINTS: What is Italy’s government doing to help families?

Meanwhile, Meloni’s government uses rhetoric about traditional, Catholic family values to justify cancelling the birth certificates of children born to same-sex couples, and approving interference from the pro-life lobby at abortion clinics. In this climate, prevailing attitudes which have for decades pushed Italian women to choose between motherhood and work seem very unlikely to change.

Now, the government is launching a Vatican-backed campaign to encourage at least 500,000 births annually by 2033 – the amount which is projected to prevent the Italian economy from collapsing in on itself. (Last year, Italy recorded 379,000 births.)

But it’s hard to see how this campaign could make a difference without major investment in transforming Italy into a forward-looking country with “hope for the future”, and while the discussion on the birth rate remains dominated by conservative, religious voices which only reinforce the societal status quo.

Anti-abortion activists hold a sign reading ‘God, fatherland, family, what a wonderful life’. Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party also uses the slogan ‘Dio, Patria, Famiglia,’ which was originally used by Mussolini. Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP

In other news, could Italy soon follow other European countries in introducing a mobile phone ban in schools?

It’s something that has been debated on and off for a while now in Italy, and in January the government ordered that both teachers and students must be prohibited from using mobile phones in classrooms.

Confusingly though, the directive from Education Minister Giuseppe Valditara was not legally enforceable, nor was it new – he was in fact urging schools to follow a directive issued back in 2007, which in turn made reference to a 1998 law.

No penalties will be applied for schools failing to follow the rule, as Valditara said: “we are not introducing disciplinary sanctions, we are calling for a sense of responsibility.”

Unsurprisingly, this has led to uncertainty over whether Italy has banned mobile phones in schools or not. As in some other countries, it depends on the school, and many individual schools are now choosing to bring in restrictions.

France and parts of Spain have gone further and introduced laws banning mobile phones in classrooms, and other countries including the Netherlands plan to do the same, after the UN in 2023 urged more countries to restrict mobile phone use in schools and issued a stark warning over the negative impact of excessive use on mental health.

Speaking in January, Italy’s education minister however seemed to have no such concerns.

He said a ban was needed to help restore teachers’ authority and remove distractions in class – but there was no mention of tackling issues like cyberbullying, the teen mental health crisis, or rising rates of mobile phone addiction.

This isn’t because Italy has no such problems – although the latest stats from the World Health Organisation show that Italy has among the lowest rates of bullying on the continent (Lithuania, England, Denmark and Latvia have the highest), online bullying among schoolchildren has become a problem here, as elsewhere.

There are increasing reports in the Italian media of all of these issues affecting young people in Italy. After all, Italy’s younger generations today are afflicted by the very same challenges as the rest of the globalised world.

Speaking of mobile phone use, we’ll leave you this week with a photo of Puglia regional governor Michele Emiliano playing Tetris on his phone.

He faced a possible vote of no confidence after a recent corruption scandal in his region, but the motion was dismissed – and the image, I think, illustrates how seriously Italian politicians tend to take the large number of no-confidence motions brought against them, seemingly just to make a point, and which (if the motion isn’t rejected) they usually pass with ease.

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