Giorgia Meloni’s Indictment: Names, Surnames and the Truth about the “Invisible Powers” that Control Italy
Giorgia Meloni’s reflection on the power system that governs Italy has touched a raw nerve in the collective conscience. The question he asked, “Have you ever wondered why things never get better, regardless of who governs?”, is not just a provocation, but a question that invites deep reflection on the nature of power and the political dynamics that guide our country.
The answer he gave, “Perhaps because certain powers never go into opposition”, is one of those that shakes the mind and opens up disturbing scenarios, suggesting a complex vision of the Italian political system, where elections do not always determine real changes.

The Italian political climate was suddenly shaken by an event that many observers define as a point of no return. It wasn’t the usual parliamentary debate or a press release filtered by image consultants. Giorgia Meloni, with a firmness that froze the audience, pronounced a real indictment live, naming the names and surnames of those who, in her opinion, have betrayed Italy in the last thirty years.
A speech without velvet gloves that pointed the finger at an entire political season, unmasking the mechanisms of a system that would seem immune to the popular vote.
The historic target: from Prodi to the euro without people
The Premier began her indictment by hitting what she considers the “original sin” of the modern Italian economy: entry into the single currency. Romano Prodi’s name was pronounced with surgical coldness. Meloni described him as the man who handed over the keys to the country to Brussels, deciding to join the euro in closed rooms, without any consultation of the citizens.
According to the Prime Minister’s reconstruction, from that moment an unstoppable descent began: erosion of sovereignty, disguised inflation and a vertical collapse in purchasing power that brought families and small businesses to their knees. It is not just an economic criticism, but a denunciation of method: a policy made above the heads of the people to please the European bureaucracies.
The attack on the leaders of the recent past: Renzi and Letta
The scope of the attack then shifted towards more recent figures. Matteo Renzi was dismissed as “the man of useless reforms”, accused of having centered his political action exclusively on ego and personal power. Meloni recalled the failure of the 2016 referendum, but took it further by claiming that Renzi had sacrificed national interests to favor the “polite circles” and the big banks, forgetting the dramatic cuts suffered by local authorities.
Immediately after, it was Enrico Letta’s turn. Defined as “dangerous because he is silent”, the former PD secretary was accused of transforming his party into an emanation of the globalist financial lobbies. For Meloni, the Italian left has progressively abandoned social rights – work, housing, security – to take refuge in ideological battles far from the real needs of the population, effectively becoming the chosen guard of financial privileges.
The comparison with Elly Schlein and the “gentle face” of Mario Draghi

A reference to the current secretary of the Democratic Party, Elly Schlein, could not be missing. The Premier accused the opposition leader of living in a “social bubble”, more concerned with likes and inclusive narratives than with the concrete reality of those who cannot pay their bills. According to Meloni, Schlein embodies the drift of a left that is all ideology and zero content, incapable of offering practical solutions to the country’s industrial and employment crisis.
However, the most sensational twist came when Mario Draghi’s name was mentioned. Despite the aura of infallibility that has often surrounded the former Prime Minister, Meloni did not mince his words, defining him as the “gentle face of a technocratic dictatorship”. The accusation is very serious: having suspended fundamental rights with the excuse of the health emergency, imposing authoritarian decrees and discriminatory green passes that would have destroyed entire economic categories without any real democratic confrontation.
The “Invisible Powers” ​​that never go into opposition
The beating heart of the speech, the one that left the deepest mark on the collective conscience, was the reflection on the system of power that governs Italy beyond the electoral results. “Have you ever wondered why things never get better, no matter who governs?” Meloni asked. His response is disturbing: “Perhaps because certain powers never go into opposition.”
In this scenario, the question that Meloni posed therefore becomes even more pertinent: if certain powers never go into opposition, how can we hope to implement the change that we all desire? The answer, unfortunately, is not simple, and depends on the ability of every citizen to be aware of these dynamics and to seek solutions that can really impact the functioning of the system.
But what is certain is that, without an honest and profound reflection on the true functioning of power in Italy, we will hardly be able to break the vicious circle that seems to keep the country imprisoned in a present that never changes.