Friday 19 December 2025 10:12
Does the Italian Left Really Oppose Giorgia Meloni?
Not admiration, but disillusion: how voter fatigue, economic pressure and mistrust of the left shaped Meloni’s rise.When Giorgia Meloni won Italy’s 2022 general election, the takeaway seemed obvious: the country had swung to the right. Headlines around the world framed it as a far-right breakthrough, a dramatic political turn. But that explanation alone never quite accounted for the discomfort that lingered afterward, especially among people who had spent their lives voting on the left. For many of them, Meloni’s victory was not only driven by belief, but by disappointment.Voter turnout dropped to 63.9 percent, the lowest in the history of the Italian Republic. Italy’s main center-left party, the Democratic Party, won about 19 percent of the vote. Smaller progressive parties performed even worse. The message in the numbers was blunt: many voters either stayed home or stopped believing the left could represent them. For years the Italian left had been struggling to explain what it actually stood for. Party leaders changed often. Coalitions shifted from election to election. Promises sounded familiar, but results rarely felt visible in daily life. By the time the 2022 campaign arrived, many voters no longer felt inspired by what the left was offering. Stability was the main pitch, and for many people, stability had started to feel like being stuck.
That feeling was strongest around money. Many young Italians remain trapped in short-term jobs with low pay and no security. Rent in cities such as Rome continues to climb. After the war in Ukraine began, food and energy prices surged. Gas, electricity, groceries, everything became more expensive at once. For many lifelong left-wing voters, survival began to feel more urgent than ideology. Big conversations about rights and reform still mattered, but they started to feel distant when everyday bills became overwhelming.
Climate policy also became complicated in real life. Most people supported environmental protections in theory. But as fuel prices rose and electricity costs doubled, the green transition became tied to real financial stress. Many voters felt the left talked about the future without protecting them in the present. In that gap, Meloni’s promise to protect Italian industry, families, and workers ultimately felt more concrete.
Then came the collapse of Mario Draghi’s government in the summer of 2022. Draghi had led, after PM Conte, Italy through the pandemic with broad political support. His fall left behind not clarity, but exhaustion. To many voters, the left now looked like part of the same political system that kept reshuffling itself without ever truly changing. By election time, appeals to “competence” and “Europe” felt hollow to people who felt poorer than they had a few years earlier.
Public safety and migration also entered the conversation in ways that were harder to ignore. Rome, like many large cities, has faced pressure on public services and migrant reception systems. While many left-wing voters still believed in humanitarian approaches, frustration grew over how these issues were being managed in reality. For some, it wasn’t about becoming anti-immigrant, it was about feeling like the state had stopped functioning properly.
For progressive women, Meloni’s rise carried an especially dark contradiction. She became Italy’s first female prime minister, a historic break in a male-dominated political culture, while advancing traditional ideas about motherhood, family, and women’s roles. Representation arrived, but liberation did not follow. Still, for some voters, the symbolic power of seeing a woman reach the highest office complicated their rejection of her politics.
There was also a quieter, more cynical logic behind some votes. Among professionals, journalists, and academics, a belief circulated that only a fully right-wing government could finally break Italy’s cycle of unstable coalitions. Let the right govern alone, some argued, and let consequences be clear. In that view, voting for Meloni wasn’t support, it was a political reset.
This is why words like “defection” don’t quite fit. Many left-leaning voters didn’t suddenly adopt right-wing beliefs. They didn’t wake up changed. Instead, they stepped away from parties that no longer felt connected to their lives. The break was not always with values, but with trust.
More than three years into Meloni’s time in office, that choice still sits uneasily with many who made it. Some feel their fears were confirmed. Others believe the crisis inside the Italian left had reached its breaking point regardless. What is clear is that Meloni’s rise was shaped not only by what she promised, but by what the left failed to deliver.
Italy’s 2022 election did not just mark the victory of the right. It marked the collapse of an old belief, that the left, however imperfect, still spoke both to people’s ideals and to their everyday lives. In the space where that belief once lived, many voters didn’t find certainty. They found a rupture. And in a country long ruled by compromise and continuity, rupture itself became the vote.
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When Giorgia Meloni won Italy’s 2022 general election, the takeaway seemed obvious: the country had swung to the right. Headlines around the world framed it as a far-right breakthrough, a dramatic political turn. But that explanation alone never quite accounted for the discomfort that lingered afterward, especially among people who had spent their lives voting on the left. For many of them, Meloni’s victory was not only driven by belief, but by disappointment.
Voter turnout dropped to 63.9 percent, the lowest in the history of the Italian Republic. Italy’s main center-left party, the Democratic Party, won about 19 percent of the vote. Smaller progressive parties performed even worse. The message in the numbers was blunt: many voters either stayed home or stopped believing the left could represent them. For years the Italian left had been struggling to explain what it actually stood for. Party leaders changed often. Coalitions shifted from election to election. Promises sounded familiar, but results rarely felt visible in daily life. By the time the 2022 campaign arrived, many voters no longer felt inspired by what the left was offering. Stability was the main pitch, and for many people, stability had started to feel like being stuck.
That feeling was strongest around money. Many young Italians remain trapped in short-term jobs with low pay and no security. Rent in cities such as Rome continues to climb. After the war in Ukraine began, food and energy prices surged. Gas, electricity, groceries, everything became more expensive at once. For many lifelong left-wing voters, survival began to feel more urgent than ideology. Big conversations about rights and reform still mattered, but they started to feel distant when everyday bills became overwhelming.
Climate policy also became complicated in real life. Most people supported environmental protections in theory. But as fuel prices rose and electricity costs doubled, the green transition became tied to real financial stress. Many voters felt the left talked about the future without protecting them in the present. In that gap, Meloni’s promise to protect Italian industry, families, and workers ultimately felt more concrete.
Then came the collapse of Mario Draghi’s government in the summer of 2022. Draghi had led, after PM Conte, Italy through the pandemic with broad political support. His fall left behind not clarity, but exhaustion. To many voters, the left now looked like part of the same political system that kept reshuffling itself without ever truly changing. By election time, appeals to “competence” and “Europe” felt hollow to people who felt poorer than they had a few years earlier.
Public safety and migration also entered the conversation in ways that were harder to ignore. Rome, like many large cities, has faced pressure on public services and migrant reception systems. While many left-wing voters still believed in humanitarian approaches, frustration grew over how these issues were being managed in reality. For some, it wasn’t about becoming anti-immigrant, it was about feeling like the state had stopped functioning properly.
For progressive women, Meloni’s rise carried an especially dark contradiction. She became Italy’s first female prime minister, a historic break in a male-dominated political culture, while advancing traditional ideas about motherhood, family, and women’s roles. Representation arrived, but liberation did not follow. Still, for some voters, the symbolic power of seeing a woman reach the highest office complicated their rejection of her politics.
There was also a quieter, more cynical logic behind some votes. Among professionals, journalists, and academics, a belief circulated that only a fully right-wing government could finally break Italy’s cycle of unstable coalitions. Let the right govern alone, some argued, and let consequences be clear. In that view, voting for Meloni wasn’t support, it was a political reset.
This is why words like “defection” don’t quite fit. Many left-leaning voters didn’t suddenly adopt right-wing beliefs. They didn’t wake up changed. Instead, they stepped away from parties that no longer felt connected to their lives. The break was not always with values, but with trust.
More than three years into Meloni’s time in office, that choice still sits uneasily with many who made it. Some feel their fears were confirmed. Others believe the crisis inside the Italian left had reached its breaking point regardless. What is clear is that Meloni’s rise was shaped not only by what she promised, but by what the left failed to deliver.
Italy’s 2022 election did not just mark the victory of the right. It marked the collapse of an old belief, that the left, however imperfect, still spoke both to people’s ideals and to their everyday lives. In the space where that belief once lived, many voters didn’t find certainty. They found a rupture. And in a country long ruled by compromise and continuity, rupture itself became the vote.
