Italy's far-right Salvini calls for populist 'European spring'


Far-right Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini yesterday said populists from Italy and Poland should spark a "European spring" to replace the center-right influence of Germany and France, as the EU prepares for key elections.

"We are preparing a new equilibrium and new energy in Europe and Poland and Italy, absolutely, will lead this new European spring," Salvini said in the Polish capital Warsaw, adding that "we have a new plan for Europe" intended to replace the dominant "French-German axis."

The May elections are shaping up into a battle between liberal pro-European Union forces, among them French President Emmanuel Macron, and populist euroskeptics represented by Salvini and several other populist politicians.

Salvini' visit to Warsaw reflected that the two countries populist-nationalist parties could explore a possible alliance in spring elections for the European Parliament. Salvini's meeting with Polish ruling party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski was also considered as an early sign of whether the Italian firebrand can effectively mount a nationalist challenge at the European level.

Salvini's League, which is one of two parties in Italy's ruling coalition, and Kaczynski's Law and Justice party, which governs alone, are both staunchly anti-migrant and criticize how the EU functions today. However, Polish skepticism of Salvini's friendly approach to Russian President Vladimir Putin could be an impediment to collaboration.

Both populist governments have been embroiled in conflicts with Brussels that have seen them strive for greater national sovereignty. Poland's clash has involved changes to the judicial system seen as anti-democratic, while Italy's has centered on its budget spending. Before Salvini's visit to Warsaw, Polish ruling officials sounded positive about possible cooperation. Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Konrad Szymanski called Italy's government the "forerunner of change" in Europe.

Jacek Czaputowicz, the foreign minister, recently said the Salvini-Kaczynski encounter would be "a meeting at the highest level" and said it would involve discussions about the elections to the European Parliament. "If chairman Jaroslaw Kaczynski admits a politician, this also testifies to a special relationship," Czaputowicz said.

The ruling party is facing sharp rebuke by its domestic critics for its apparent openness to working with Salvini. Poland's main opposition leader, Grzegorz Schetyna, yesterday called the meeting between Salvini and Kaczynski "absurd and shocking," referring to Salvini's League as a "nationalist, radical and pro-Russian party."