On the night of September 25, 2022, a political earthquake shook Italy and sent tremors across Europe. Giorgia Meloni had led her party, Fratelli d'Italia, to a stunning victory, positioning her to become not only Italy's first female prime minister but also the leader of its most right-wing government since the Second World War. To her supporters, she was a patriot, a plain-speaking defender of "God, homeland, family." To her detractors, she was a dangerous figure whose party was a direct descendant of Italy's neo-fascist past. This biography delves into the multifaceted and polarizing story of one of contemporary politics' most compelling figures.
The narrative traces Meloni's improbable journey, beginning in the working-class Garbatella district of Rome, where a childhood defined by an absent father forged in her a fierce sense of resilience. It explores her political awakening as a teenage activist in the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement (MSI) during the tumultuous 1990s, a period of profound crisis for the Italian state. The book follows her rise through the ranks of the MSI's successor, the National Alliance, her experience as Italy's youngest-ever minister under Silvio Berlusconi, and the pivotal, high-stakes decision to break away and co-found her own party from the political wilderness.
Discover how Meloni spent a decade patiently building Fratelli d'Italia from a marginal party into a national force. The book details the crafting of her powerful political identity, crystallized in the viral "I am Giorgia. I'm a woman, I'm a mother, I'm Italian, I'm Christian" speech that became a pop-culture phenomenon. It examines the crucial strategic gamble of her career: her decision to stand as the sole voice of opposition to Mario Draghi's government of national unity. This move, which isolated her from the entire political establishment, ultimately positioned her as the only true alternative and paved her path directly to the prime minister's office.
Once in power, the biography offers a comprehensive portrait of a Melonian Italy in action. It explores her government's dual strategy: a surprising pragmatism on economics and foreign affairs-marked by fiscal prudence and staunch, unwavering support for NATO and Ukraine-designed to reassure international partners. This is contrasted with a hardline domestic agenda, from a fierce crackdown on illegal immigration and the war on NGO rescue ships to an unapologetic campaign to fight the culture wars in defense of the traditional family. Delving into both the personal and the political, this account examines a leader navigating the immense challenges of governance while pursuing an ambitious vision to fundamentally reshape the future of her nation.