BORGO EGNAZIA, Italy — President Joe Biden and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had a lot to talk about Friday when they met on the sidelines of the Group of Seven summit, but one notable matter wasn't on the table: abortion, an issue that emerged as an unexpected friction point among the democracies gathered in Italy.
Meloni's right-wing government this week worked to water down references to abortion in the final statement issued by all the G7 nations at the end of the summit, prompting a disagreement between nations over language in the final draft of their shared commitments. That is according to two senior U.S. officials, a senior European Union official and two other officials who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity to talk about the discussions over the statement that were not made public.
The final statement, released Friday, omits the word ''abortion'' but does reference the need to promote ''reproductive health and rights."
A White House readout of the Biden-Meloni meeting did not refer to the issue and instead emphasized their common efforts to ''deepen the U.S.-Italy partnership across a range of vital security, economic, and regional issues.'' It cited Meloni's ''steadfast support for Ukraine as it continues to defend itself from Russia's brutal war of aggression, including Italy's critical security assistance.''
White House officials say the two leaders work together well despite Meloni's views on abortion and her other conservative political views, which align more closely with Republicans in the U.S.
The summit has underscored how their relationship has evolved since Meloni rose to power in 2022 as the head of Italy's first far-right-led government since the end of World War II. Soon after Meloni's victory, Biden warned about the rise of hard-right populism in Europe and in the United States.
Those concerns have eased with Meloni's strong support of Ukraine at a time when the commitment by some other far-right leaders has been flagging. Meloni also announced on Thursday that Italy would participate in a U.S.-led investment effort in Africa, the Lobito railway corridor. It was a clear gesture of U.S. support coming on the heels of Italy's withdrawal from China's ''belt and road'' infrastructure initiative.
Biden initially ''used Meloni's candidacy as a warning to transatlanticists on both sides of the Atlantic,'' Rachel Rizzo, a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's Europe Center in Washington, said before the summit. ''But her premiership has actually been quite forward-leaning in terms of Italian support for Ukraine, in terms of Italian support for NATO. So that relationship has actually developed in a pretty positive direction.''