Pedro Sanchez wanted to leave in the hands of José Manuel delivery notes, Foreign Minister, the first official reaction of the Government on the victory of the far-right Giorgia Meloni. the leader of Brothers from Italy she won the elections this Sunday with 44% of the votes and will be the country’s next prime minister. At the moment, politics is the representative of populism in Italy and, according to Albares, this type of movement, with “miraculous solutions” and demagoguery, grows in moments of uncertainty, although “they always end the same: in catastrophe.”
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The head of Spanish diplomacy has reflected on Meloni’s victory in a colloquium organized by the Europa Press agency in Madrid. The matter has monopolized the first part of the act. Albares has started asking caution in analysis and the one he has done has begun with a “broader reflection” on Europe, which he sees as one of the most delicate situations since the fall of the Berlin Wall. In his opinion, a new European order is being defined in which two models are currently facing each other in Ukraine: that of the european Construction, supported by the values of “democracy, the rule of law, plurality, diversity and the renunciation of violence as a way of relating between States”, and the dand Vladimir Putin, “in which political forces in Europe are looked at”, which “believes in homogeneity and is contrary to the European construction”.
Albares, on Meloni’s victory in Italy: “There are two models that are facing each other: that of European construction and that of Putin. This is an authoritarian model and contrary to the pillars of European construction, which is the basis of our prosperity ” #EPBreakfastAlbares pic.twitter.com/2j3ofgKOD9
— Europe Press (@europapress) September 26, 2022
Albares has not wanted to comment if he thinks that Meloni’s progress will be repeated with Vox, his sister party in Spain, in next year’s general elections. “It has nothing to do with it. Each country experiences very, very different circumstances. You don’t have to focus on Italy or that country. It’s a global challenge and has its epicenter in Europe. Citizens ask legitimate questions and express uncertainty and uneasiness in the face of changes as profound as they are taking place. But those who offer short-term, miraculous solutions, ‘I guarantee you that we will return to other times‘, they represent pure populism and demagoguery,” he explained.