Europe | Big Brothers

Meet the hard-right party likely to win Italy’s election

The Brothers of Italy are responding to populist demand

ASCOLI PICENO, ITALY - APRIL 30: Marco Fioravanti Mayor looks on looks from the Palazzo dei Capitani del Popolo in the background the Church of San Francesco and Piazza del Popolo in Ascoli Piceno on April 30, 2020 in Ascoli Piceno, Italy. Italy will remain on lockdown to stem the transmission of the Coronavirus (Covid-19), slowly easing restrictions. (Photo by Giuseppe Bellini/Getty Images)
|Ascoli Piceno

Marco fioravanti’s father died when he was a teenager, and he went to work in a factory to help support his family. But Mr Fioravanti never gave up on his dream of university, eventually winning a degree in political science. By the age of 26 he was a city councillor in his hometown of Ascoli Piceno, a picturesque place where Renaissance palaces nestle by a river winding out of the Apennine mountains. Three years ago he was elected mayor. Every month he makes himself available to voters in a local café. “Locked away in the town hall, you risk losing touch with the problems of the city,” he says.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Big Brothers”

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