Matteo Salvini’s anti-immigration League, which triumphed at the European elections in Italy, did particularly well in centres seen as migrant ‘hot spots’, including a town held up as a model of integration.

On Lampedusa, the Italian island closest to the Libyan coast where many migrant boats arrive, the anti-immigration party pocketed 45.8 percent of the vote in Sunday’s election.

It also scooped 44 percent of votes in Ventimiglia, where migrants attempt to cross over into France undetected, and 41 percent in Bardonecchia, the last station stop for those willing to risk frostbite on the mountain crossings.

In Calabria, the heartland of the League’s coalition partner — the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) — Salvini’s party outdid the competition in Riace, a town acclaimed by the left as an example of migrant integration.

Former mayor Domenico Lucano, the man behind the scheme, is being prosecuted for allegedly aiding illegal immigration. The League took 30 percent of the votes in the small town, compared to 26 percent for the M5S and 17 percent for the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), which supports Lucano.

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Italian Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Matteo Salvini speaks during a press conference in the Lega headquarters in northern Milan following the results of the European parliamentary elections, on May 27, 2019. – Matteo Salvini’s anti-migrant League party won the most votes on May 26 in European elections in Italy, marking a historic success for the far-right. With over 99 percent of ballots counted, the League won 34.3 percent, compared to just six percent in the 2014 EU elections and 17 percent in the Italian general election last year. (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP)