Pull, pull, pull eventually the thread breaks. And never like this moment, Carlo Calenda and Matteo Renzi are really one step away from a sensational divorce. A thousand and more reconstructions in recent days, clashes ranging from the request for the closure of Leopolda (a kind of totem for the Renzians), to a more shared management of money (which, until today, seems to have been used almost entirely by the exponents of action). In the newspaper La Stampa, an indiscretion appears that inflames, in an instant, the tempers (by the way, already tense). “Calenda is crazy, he took the wrong pills,” Matteo Renzi was quoted as saying by the Turin newspaper. Unwanted words from Calenda, who responds in rhymes on Twitter. “Matteo Renzi these vulgarities hide an exaggerated nervousness. You simply tried to trick us and it was returned to sender. This time, don’t worry, it didn’t work. The End”.
The two leaders are trying to avoid what seems to be inevitable now. There are three possible scenarios. The first provides a dose of realism that, at the moment, is difficult to calibrate beyond fifteen percent: it lowers the tone, creates a single party, aware that, otherwise, detractors, in the coming years, will label the “Third Pole ” just like accordcchio to enter Parliament. The issue of Forza Italia must not be forgotten. Silvio Berlusconi’s health conditions have created a climate of insecurity within Forza Italia. For the future that will be. wishes for another hundred years of life to the founder of Fininvest, it is natural that Renzi looks with interest at the more moderate and liberal centre-right party. Fi”, says an Azione executive. Calenda, in turn, runs the risk of finding himself with a match in his hand. Impossible for him to knock on the door of both the Democratic Party and Five Stars, as well as the moderates. isolation that could lead the former Minister of Economic Development to a more lenient advice.
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.