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  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, steps off stage after a rally in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, takes a selfie with supporter after her rally in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) listen to the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, during a rally in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: (R-L) LGBTQ+ activist Marco Marras (24) walks on stage to protest against Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy), at the start of her rally in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni is the leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month. Ms Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Lucia Loddo (55), a supporter of the political party Fratelli d'Italia, is seen here at a rally by Giorgia Meloni (45), the party leader and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by leader Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Volunteers of Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) prepare party flags before a rally with leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: A stage is set for a political rally with Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, here in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: An activist is arrested by law enforcement agents for interrupting a rally by Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, rallies in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Vittorio Farina (71), a retired teacher history teacher and supporter of the political party Fratelli d'Italia, poses for a portrait at a rally by Giorgia Meloni (45), the party leader and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: A supporter of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) runs with an Italian flag at a rally with Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Volunteers of Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) prepare party flags before a rally with leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, poses for a portrait in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: Supporters of the political party Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) attend a rally by the party leader Giorgia Meloni (45), the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 2 SEPTEMBER 2022: A migrant walks by a stage set for a political rally with Giorgia Meloni (45), leader of the Fratelli d'Italia (Brothers of Italy) party and the leading candidate to become Italy’s next prime minister later this month, here in Cagliari, Italy, on September 2nd 2022.<br />
<br />
Giorgia Meloni,  whose campaign slogan is “Ready,”  could also become the first head of a hard right party descended from post-Fascism to lead the country, and a major Western European nation, since the end of the Second World War.<br />
<br />
The likely prospect of Ms. Meloni and her coalition partners Silvio Berlusconi, the former prime minister, and Matteo Salvini, the former darling of the hard right, running the country has terrified a European establishment wary of their mishandling billions of euros in recovery funds, imposing protectionism, eroding norms and detonating a nationalist bomb from within the heart of the Europe Union.<br />
<br />
Ms. Meloni's wave seemed to have crested out of nowhere, growing from four percent in 2018 to 25 percent in the polls of the 2022 elections.
    CIPG_20220902_NYT-Meloni-Sardinia_A7...jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A couple is here in the Castello district by the Basinot San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5727.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: View of the Castello district from the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5635.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A tourist looks at the panorama from the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5621.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A couple and a tourist are here at the Bastione San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5428.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: Wedding guests step outside a church under the porticos of via Roma in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5381.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A wedding guest steps outside a church under the porticos of via Roma in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5353.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A couple sits on stairs by the Bastion San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5712.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A waiter takes orders at tables on a terrace of a cafe in the Castello district in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014. Behind him is the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination.
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5690.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: View of the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant. left), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination, and the harbor in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5670.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: View of the bay from the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5604.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A couple walks in the Castello district in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5514.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A boy plays with his kick scooter at the Bastion San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5512.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A couple is here at the Bastione San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay,  in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5437.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: Wedding guests step outside a church under the porticos of via Roma in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5358.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: A tourist looks at the panorama from the Torre dell'Elefante (Tower of the Elephant), built in the XIV century during the Pisan domination, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5597.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: Teenagers walk down the stairs of the Bastione San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5553.jpg
  • CAGLIARI, ITALY - 28 JUNE 2014: People walk down the stairs of the Bastion San Remy, built in the XIX century on the defensive walls of the Castello district and from which one can see the whole bay, in Cagliari, Italy, on June 28th 2014
    CIPG_20140628_NYT_Sardinia__M3_5479.jpg