Sunday, July 27, 2014

Filibuster on reform, Renzi: “They’re making me angry … – TGCOM

Filibuster on reform, Renzi: "They're making me angry … – TGCOM

– “They make me angry or the government, but I do not get angry, I get the impression that they are angering citizens.” Matteo Renzi said in an interview with the TG5 adding: “When you see the senators who should be in Parliament to vote to go for strolls by the Senate at the Quirinale understand that there is something that does not come back.”

“If they want to block 8 thousand amendments and the Senate – says the prime minister – this is called a filibuster: we put there and, little by little, we move forward with the peace of mind of knowing that we do not tire or tire is better than before them. ” To the President of the Council, must “say clearly: they want to really discuss the merits of 10, 20, 30, 50 points to change? We can also discuss, but you can not block the reforms.”

And on the date, Renzi remains convinced that the Parliament can be closed by 8 August: “I believe there are conditions to do it.” But the opposition warns that, otherwise, “the week after it will go on.’s Not a question of hours, days, we must not make the reforms running because we have to do it, but we certainly can not think of who he always says no, those who imagine to take us into the swamp. “

On the same wavelength also the Minister for Reforms, Mary Helen Woods, that while” confident in the success of the reform, “warns that” if we do not finish it because remains the obstructionism of the opposition, we will continue beyond August 8.’s not a drama, we will work more and we will do a few days off in less. ” Because, for the Woods, “in any democratic country with a minority can filibuster to block the country and prevent the majority from carrying out its commitments to citizens.” Who is doing filibuster in the Senate is in fact “a small minority that thinks to lose patience or the government Renzi, but if it goes on like this, the risk is that they are Italians to lose it.”

Finally, the Prime Minister also spoke of the elections, explaining that “can not be consistently relied upon” to vote you go “every few years: the task of the political elections, but it is not going to change Italy.”

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