Giorgia Meloni

Journalist

Giorgia Meloni was born in Rome, Lazio, Italy on January 15th, 1977 and is the Journalist. At the age of 47, Giorgia Meloni biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
January 15, 1977
Nationality
Italy
Place of Birth
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Age
47 years old
Zodiac Sign
Capricorn
Profession
Journalist, Politician
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Giorgia Meloni Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Giorgia Meloni Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Giorgia Meloni Life

Giorgia Meloni (born 15 January 1977) is an Italian journalist and politician, leader of Brothers of Italy, a national conservative party in Italy.

Meloni served as both Minister of Youth in Silvio Berlusconi's fourth government and president of Young Italy, The People of Freedom's youth section. She is the co-founder of the Brothers of Italy, alongside Guido Crosetto and Ignazio La Russa, and on March 8, 2014, she was elected president of the Italian Republic.

She has been a member of the Chamber of Deputies of Italy since 2006.

Early life

Giorgia Meloni was born in Rome on January 15th, 1977. Her father was from Sardinia and her mother from Sicily. In 1995, her father, a tax advisor, was found guilty of drug trafficking and sentenced to nine years in a Spanish prison. He left the family when she was 11 years old in 1988 by heading to the Canary Islands. She grew up in Garbatella's working-class neighborhood.

She joined the Youth Front, the Italian Social Movement's youth wing, at 15 years old, in 1992, a neo-fascist political party that disdissolved in 1995. She created Gli Antenati (The Ancestors), a student organization that took part in the resistance against the government education reform pushed by minister Rosa Russo Iervolino.

She became the national head of Student Action, the student movement of the post-fascist National Alliance (AN), the national-conservative heir of the MSI, in 1996, when she represented this group in the Italian Ministry of Education's Student Associations Forum. After winning the primary election, she was elected as a councillor of the Province of Rome in 1998, and she served in that position until 2002. She was elected national director in 2000 and became the first female president of Youth Action, the AN youth wing, in 2004. During these years, she served as a nanny, waitress, and bartender at the Piper Club, one of Rome's most popular night clubs.

Meloni graduated from Amerigo Vespucci Institute (AVI) in Rome in 1996. She revealed in her curriculum vitae that she obtained a high school diploma in languages, with the final mark of 60/60. The AVI was not a foreign language high school and was not qualified to offer a diploma in languages; rather, it was a technical high school specialized in the tourist industry, which she later explained.

Personal life

Ginevra Giambruno, a journalist who works for Silvio Berlusconi's Mediaset TV station, has a daughter. She has confirmed that she is a Catholic Christian and has used her religious identity to help her develop her national brand. "I am Giorgia." She said in a rally in Rome in 2019: "I am Giorgia." I'm a woman, I'm a mother, I'm Italian, and I'm Christian. She reportedly continued to embrace the old Italian fascist slogan "God, fatherland, and family" in September 2022. She has expressed dissatisfaction with Italy's fascist past, according to her.

Meloni, a devoted fan of fantasy, is particularly fond of J. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. She attended the Camp Hobbit festival and performed with the Italian Social Movement's far-right folk group Compagnia dell'Anello, which was named after The Fellowship of the Ring. After the protagonist of the novel Atreju, she named her political conference Atreju. "I think that Tolkien will say better than we can what conservatives believe in," Meloni told The New York Times. She likes British political philosopher Roger Scruton, and she says, "If I were British, I would be a Tory."

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Giorgia Meloni Career

Political career

She was elected as a member of the National Alliance (AN) in 2006, where she became the country's youngest ever vice president. She began to work as a journalist in the same year. Meloni defended the Berluscon III Cabinet's legislation in 2006 that benefitted businesses of prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi's firms, as well as postponed ongoing trials involving him. "It's crucial to contextualize them," Meloni said. Silvio Berlusconi wrote those laws for himself. But they are still fair laws."

She was elected Minister of Youth in the Berlusconi IV Cabinet in 2008, a position she held until November 16, 2011, when Berlusconi was forced to resign as the prime minister amid a financial crisis and widespread demonstrations. She was Italy's youngest prime minister. In August 2008, Berlusconi and the foreign affairs minister Franco Frattini all asked Italian athletes to postpone the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games in protest with China's policies against Tibet. In 2009, her party merged with Forza Italia (FI) into The People of Freedom (PdL) and she took over the presidency of the united party's youth section, Young Italy. She voted in favour of a decree against euthanasia in the same year.

The Right to the Future, a 300 million euro package, was unveiled in November 2010 by a minister in November 2010. It was designed to draw in young people and featured five initiatives, including awards for new entrepreneurs, relocation packages for migrant employees, and loans for deserving students. In November 2012, she declared her attempt to challenge Angelino Alfano's PdL leadership against him in the opposition to the Monti Cabinet's support for the Monti Cabinet. After the primary results were canceled, she joined forces with fellow politicians Ignazio La Russa and Guido Crosetto to devise an anti-Monti campaign, calling for revival within the party and also critical of Berlusconi's leadership.

Meloni, La Russa, and Crosetto founded Brothers of Italy, an Italian national anthem party, whose name derives from the Italian national anthem's terms. She ran as part of Berluscon's center-right government in 2013 and gained 2.0 percent of the vote and nine seats. She was re-elected to the Chamber of Deputies for Lombardy and was later voted the party's leader in the House, a position she would hold until 2014 when she resigned to devote herself to the party. Fabio Rampelli took over Fabio Rampelli's place.

In March 2014, she became the president of FdI, and in April she was nominated for the 2014 European Parliament election in Italy as the head of the FdI in both of the five constituencies. The FdI party received 37% of the votes, not exceeding the threshold of 4%; she did not become a Member of the European Parliament; she gained 348,700 votes. Giorgia Meloni, a centrist political committee that supported her campaigns, launched Our Land – Italians on November 4, 2015. Our Land was a parallel function of FdI and was aimed at expanding FdI's large base.

She appeared in the Family Day, an anti-LGBT rights demonstration, on January 30, 2016, protesting LGBT adoption. She declared that she was pregnant on the same Family Day; her daughter Ginevra was born on September 16th. She ran for mayor with the help of Us with Salvini, a political group led by Matteo Salvini, and against the candidate run by Berlusconi's Forza Italia (FI). In May 2016, she promised to name a street after Giorgio Almirante if elected, sparking controversies among the local Jewish community and the anti-fascist ANPI. Meloni obtained 20.6% of the vote, nearly twice as much as FI's nominee, but she did not qualify for the run-off, while FdI gained 12.3% of the vote.

Meloni formed the "No Thanks" committee during the 2016 Italian constitutional referendum on Renzi's government's reform, one of which was against then prime minister Matteo Renzi. Meloni called for snap elections after "No" gained almost 60% of the seats on December 4th. Renzi resigned on the next day, but she did not have a sense of the new government led by Paolo Gentiloni on December 12th. Meloni's re-election as president of the party, as well as the introduction of Daniela Santanchè, a long-serving right-wing politician, was among the new members of the party's Congress on December 2nd-to-date.

As the party's leader, she decided to join the League (Lega), led by Salvini, in a series of political campaigns against the centre-left government led by the Democratic Party (PD), placing FdI in eurosceptic and right-wing populist positions. FdI ran as part of the centre-right coalition in the 2018 Italian general election, with Berlusconi's FI, Salvini's Lega, and Raffaele Fitto's Us with Italy. Meloni's party gained 44 percent of the vote and more than three times the seats were reclaimed in 2013. She was elected to the Chamber of Deputies for the single-member constituency of Latina, Lazio, with a majority of 41%. The center-right coalition, which the League formed as the country's most influential party, gained a plurality of seats in the Chamber of Deputies; if no political party or party gained a landslide, it resulted in a hung parliament.

Giulio Tremonti, a financier, businessman, and politician, joined the Aspen Institute, an international think tank headquartered in Washington, D.C., in February 2021. Both president Sergio Mattarella and Prime Minister Mario Draghi called Meloni in 2021, insulting her vulgar names from a radio; Gozzini and Prime Minister Mario Draghi were contacted by Meloni on 19 February 2021, who was suspended by the board of his University.

Meloni signed the Madrid Charter in October 2021, a document that identifies left-wing parties as enemies of Ibero-America's "criminal project" that is "under the Cuban regime's umbrella." Vox, a Spanish ultranationalist group, had it drafted it. She also attended Vox's party congress, where she said, "Yes to the natural family." No to the LGBT lobby. Yes to sexual identity. No to gender politics... no to Islamist violence, please protect borders, no to mass migration, no to big multinational banks... no to big foreign finance, please don't go to Brussels's bureaucrats. Meloni appeared at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in Florida in February 2022. She told the students in the United States' Republican national convention and officials that they must promote their views against progressives.

The leader of the party winning the most seats in the 2022 Italian general election, a snap election that was postponed since the 2022 Italian government crisis, was agreed among the center-right coalition that the party's leader would be elected as the prime minister candidate. According to some academics, FdI was the first party in the coalition as of July 2022, and she was widely predicted to become Prime Minister of Italy if the center-right alliance gained absolute majority in Parliament, the first government in the Italian Republic's history. Meloni told the foreign press that Italian fascism is history, despite concerns that many who identify FdI as neo-fascist or far right, as well as fears within the European Commission that she might lead Italy against Hungary under Viktor Orbán. She described the Conservative Party in Israel, Likud in Israel, and the Republican Party in the United States as president of the European Conservative and Reformist Party since 2020. Critics were skeptical of her claims, citing her speeches on immigration and LGBT rights as reasons for her skepticism. She fought for lower taxes, less European bureaucracy, and a halt to immigration through a naval blockade, claiming that national interest first comes first.

Exit polls showed that the center-right alliance would gain a majority of seats in the 2022 general election, despite a historic low voter turnout. Meloni was expected to be the party's first female prime minister, with FdI receiving a plurality of seats and the center-right coalition deciding that the government's top party would nominate the next prime minister. The PD, the leader of the centre-left coalition, conceded defeat just after the exit polls, and Orbán's Orbán, Poland's Liz Truss, and Marine Le Pen, the former head of National Rally (RN) in France, congratulated Meloni. Meloni's successes were also celebrated by European radical right parties and politicians, including Alternative for Germany and Vox. Gianfranco Fini, the former head of the MSI and AN during Meloni's political career, expressed admiration for her party's victory and described her as an anti-fascist, despite the label's refusal, who believes the term to be political.

Observers have debated and disagreed on how right-wing a Meloni-led government would be, and which term and position on the political spectrum would be more accurate and credible. It has been described as Italy's first far-right-led government since World War II, and Meloni as the first far-right leader since Benito Mussolini, according to some academics, it has been the country's first far-right government since 1945. Analysts have disagreed on which right-wing a Meloni-led government would be and in which direction it would go, citing Berlusconi and Salvini's Russian roots in comparison to Meloni's Atlanticism. Meloni's and her party's neo-fascist roots, some, such as Sky News, disagreed with the far-right term and wrote, "Giorgia Meloni is not a fascist." "Have we got a center-right government, have we got the right coalition, have we got a far-right government, or has there been a fascist coalition," CNBC's Steve Sedwick summarized the discussion. "Depending on who you read," I have seen all four books in print.

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EU leaders push for dialogue with Syria to tackle refugee crisis and ensure conditions for 'safe' and 'dignified' route home

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 18, 2024
Syria has been a pariah in the wake of chemical weapon strikes by its dictator Bashar al-Assad.  But at a summit in Brussels, Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni lobbied for a review of the EU's strategy towards Damascus.

Time for a Rwanda rethink, Keir? EU prepares to sign off 'returns hubs' for failed asylum seekers in third countries - after Labour axed the Tories' plans

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 16, 2024
EU leaders are set to discuss plans for migrant 'returns hubs' as the bloc shifts its stance on asylum deportation camps. Ahead of this week's European Council summit, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen called for 'innovative ways to counter illegal migration'. In a letter to the bloc's leaders ahead of their gathering in Brussels, Ms von der Leyen said they should consider the development of 'return hubs outside the EU'. These would likely house failed asylum seekers sent from the EU when they are served with deportation orders. She added the EU would be able to 'draw lessons' from Italy's new asylum pact with Albania. This will see migrants rescued at sea by Italian vessels transferred to Albania to have their asylum claims processed. Ms von der Leyen's call for EU leaders to consider the approval of 'returns hubs' represents an about-turn from Brussels bosses on how to tackle illegal migration.

Inside depraved AI deepfake porn Telegram group that encourages users to share naked pictures of their female family members in vile 'humiliation rooms'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 12, 2024
In dark corners of the internet, depraved content creators are sharing pornographic pictures and videos made with artificial intelligence to make money - and humiliate their loved ones. Women are being photographed or videoed drugged or asleep in compromising positions. Photos of mothers and sisters are being distributed and edited as part of a bizarre humiliation ritual. And students under the legal age are being identified and targeted for 'deepfake' content. Scores of secret chat rooms based in South Korea - some hidden behind the careful encryption of popular platforms like Telegram - host hundreds of thousands of participants, with journalists reporting that to gain access, users must share indecent images of their own family members.