In recent days the leader of the PP, Alberto Núñez Feijóo and the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen have opened an agreement with the extreme right ahead of the next European elections on June 9. Both have also defended that the far-right Prime Minister of Italy, Giorgia Meloni, It is not “homologous to other far-right parties”.

But the truth is that Giorgia Meloni She is an ultra no matter what Von Der Leyen or Feijóo say. One of the first reasons is because she legislates against women. Meloni wants to force women who decide to have an abortion to listen to the heartbeat of the fetus. She claims that she is a woman but she does not allow them to abort freely and without interference. In addition to the fetal heartbeat, he will authorize anti-abortion groups to enter the clinics.

We have also heard her say that she is a mother, but the far-right also legislates against mothers and more specifically against those who are lesbians. She has banned gay couples from registering their children.

Although he has occasionally let himself be touched by the rainbow flag, LGBT people are also in the crosshairs of their policiess. Thousands of same-sex couples cannot register their children in Italy’s civil registry if they were born through assisted fertilization, because they do not fit into what Meloni calls a “natural family.”

Yes to the natural family, no to the LGBT lobby. Yes to sexual identity, no to gender ideology. No to Islamist violence, yes to safe borders!”, the Italian far-right has assured on more than one occasion.

Meloni not only has policies against lesbian mothers or against women who want to have an abortion, it also regulates against migrants. He wants them outside the country, in Albania. He intends to take thousands of migrants arriving on Italian shores to an Albanian wasteland.

For all this, Meloni is an ultra no matter what Von Der Leyen and Feijóo say. When Meloni was young He said of Mussolini that he was “a good politician” and that “everything he did he did for Italy.”

Without going any further, the first party in which the Italian prime minister was a member was a post-fascist formation, ‘Movimento Sociale Italiano’. Its logo, a tricolor flame in a white circle, is an emblem similar to that of her current party, ‘Fratelli of Italy’.