Wanted in Rome
Rome Gives American Commentator Nick Fuentes the Full Parcheggiatore Abusivo Experience Waiting for a McDonald's Order Near the Vatican, the US Political Commentator Met One of Rome's Most Persistent Urban Institutions. Rome has a way of treating everyone equally. It does not matter who you are, where you come from, or what your political opinions are. If you park near the Vatican, someone will appear and ask you to move your car. Nick Fuentes, the American political commentator known for his controversial far-right views, discovered this last week when a parcheggiatore abusivo approached him outside a McDonald's near the Vatican and began insistently demanding that he move his vehicle. The exchange was filmed and posted on social media, where it attracted considerable attention, partly for the confrontation itself and partly for the setting: one of the world's most visited religious sites, a fast food order in progress, and Rome's most enduring informal institution doing what it always does. The parcheggiatore abusivo, for the uninitiated, is a figure as Roman as the Colosseum and considerably harder to eradicate. He appears without invitation, gestures you into a parking space you could have found yourself, and then expects payment for the service. He is officially illegal, periodically fined, and entirely undeterred. Successive municipal administrations have announced crackdowns. He remains. What made the Fuentes clip travel was the particular absurdity of the scene. A man who has made a career of confrontational media, who has appeared alongside some of the most powerful political figures in the United States, found himself in a standoff with a man whose entire operation consists of a high-visibility vest and an unshakeable confidence that you owe him money. Rome was not impressed by the celebrity. Rome is never impressed by the celebrity. The city has been doing this since before America existed. Fuentes was in Rome as part of a broader European visit. He did not get his parking situation resolved quickly. The McDonald's order, presumably, went cold. Nick Fuentes waiting on a McDonald's order outside the Vatican when a random homeless guy walked up and very insistently tried to get him to move his car to a new spot.Nothing suspicious about that...Even the Holy See has parking scammers. Wild.pic.twitter.com/AKEkldsGOH — Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) April 28, 2026
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