Featured Post

Amazon Banned My Book: This is My Response to Amazon

Logic is an enemy  and Truth is a menace. I am nothing more than a reminder to you that  you cannot destroy Truth by burnin...

21 December 2014

Third of Italians back anti-immigrant Northern League


ROME – More than one third of Italians — including many in the once-hostile south — are ready to vote for the anti-EU, anti-immigration Northern League, a poll showed Sunday.

Matteo Salvini, the youthful leader of the pro-White regional party, confirmed his status as the rising star of Italian politics with approval ratings of 35 percent in a Demos & Pi poll published by La Repubblica newspaper — up five percent on November.

Salvini, 41, who launched a bid to extend his party’s appeal to the poorer south of the country amid much fanfare on Friday, came second in the poll to Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, 39, who it said has the confidence of exactly half of Italians.

His rise is often compared with that of France’s pro-White leader Marine Le Pen, who has tried to steer the National Front closer to the mainstream in a bid for power.

But Salvini has had to overcome Italy’s much wider regional divisions and his party’s demands that the wealthier north, which he calls “Padania,” be allowed to break away.

The party has also traditionally held the rest of the country south of Tuscany in contempt. Even so the poll seems to show the party’s center of gravity shifting south on the back of Salvini’s popularity.

In fact, 19 percent of voters in the center of the country said they would vote for it — 1 percent higher than in its northern heartlands — with seven percent of southerners saying they would support it.

Italy has seen an unprecedented surge of illegal immigrants this year, with more than 150,000 rescued from rickety boats attempting to reach its southern shores from North Africa.

Sunday’s poll appears to show support for the government stabilizing, with Renzi’s popularity, which stood at 69 percent in June before falling back to 43 percent in November, bouncing back to 46 percent in December.