Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Gentiloni get the confidence. Forza Italia opens: “respects Us” – The NINETEENTH Century

The premier Paolo Gentiloni

The premier Paolo Gentiloni

In his response, Gentiloni has wanted to dispel any suspicion that albergasse in the house Renzi. First message: “The government must complete the exceptional work of reformation, innovation and modernisation that has been done in recent years”, “a mole that is recognized by Italian citizens and in the international office”. Second message: it is true that the government will not promote the electoral reform, but this needs to be addressed and endorsed “urgent”. How would Renzi. For the rest Gentiloni has with garbo insisted on carving out an identity of their own (“we are Not lovers of continuity”), in particular by highlighting in several steps, the formal and substantive compliance with the institutions: “I Ask for your trust, and I express my confidence in the Senate’; ‘ I will defend the prerogatives of the Parliament vis-à-vis all,” and who, then, if it is done the flag “to attend the meetings in a civilised and decent manner”; “I ask all the ministers to work with dignity”, invoking for itself the term of “humility”.

Renzi gives Customers the sweatshirt of Amatrice (Photo)

An approach different from that of Matteo Renzi, that has led some opponents (not the Five-Star and the League) out irrituali congratulations to the premier. Gaetano Quagliariello: “I wish you to work from the part of retreaders”. Mineo: “She has made her debut with tones and gentle, and I thank you for this”. The president of the senators of Forza Italy, Paolo Romani: “Give a discharge to the president Gentiloni of the sign of discontinuity.” Also the former president of the Council Mario Monti has wrong-footed everyone by announcing his own vote, but after drawing a topic deadly against Renzi: “A shame that it had been chosen as the top priority in the reform of the Constitution, the purpose noble, but done in a way unsatisfactory, for having underestimated the importance that would have had to widen the consensus in the Parliame nt to avoid a referendum, instead of giving almost the impression of it as a test of strength”. And Monti has dropped the ace conceptual: “In 2012 for the reform of article 81 of the Constitution,” his government pursued a broad-based consensus “that led to the 73% of yes in the Senate and 78% of the Room. There was a referendum: we can imagine what it would have been the outcome”.

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