The vice-president of Lombardy, Fabrizio Sala, elected deputy by the ranks of Forza Italia, comments on the trip by the Third Pole to meet Giorgia Meloni during the December 1st edition of Coffee Break, the morning program of La7 that sees Andrea Pancani as host: “Carlo Calenda went to the meeting, but the cunning is Matteo Renzi’s. The government came in a month ago and is practically doing a financial stunt entirely on energy, the mother of all problems, inflation, economic growth, family poverty. There is little money left and everyone wants to give an opinion, because the Legislative program is united, but there are differences between the majority parties, which are firm in the majority. There is no problem of majority, on the contrary, the great division of the opposition is good for the majority. I’m talking purely political. With little money and little time you want to start communicating the line of each political party. For example, Forza Italia calls for raising minimum pensions and reducing taxes on hiring new workers. It’s just the beginning of a term.”
“I just arrived at the Chamber, but I’ve been at the head of the public machine for 27 years. When the opposition goes to meet the leader of the majority – continues Sala su Calenda in Palazzo Chigi – it is because they are asking for something. I wouldn’t like that, since there are Copasir and Vigilanza Rai to name, and the opposition is extremely divided, Renzi ably tried to try to negotiate something. The Third Pole’s lack of obstruction in the maneuver is very good for most and it is also good for the country, most take home a good game. Of course – comments the blue nobleman – we are in the electoral campaign in Lazio and Lombardy and they are on one side in one way and on the other in another. In my opinion, it is not that the government will end in a year and a half, but that the Third Pole will collapse, with some Pds and some centrists inside”.
Source: IL Tempo
Emma Fitzgerald is an accomplished political journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in political science and international relations, she has a deep understanding of the political landscape and the forces that shape it.