A decisive electoral campaign for the future of the Old Continent. A vote that will outline financial and foreign policy structures capable of changing, in one way or another, the lives of ordinary citizens. A challenge, that of immigrants, NGOs and boats coming from Africa, which will be at the center of lively debates. The League will inaugurate its electoral campaign for the 2024 European Championship with an event in Florence on December 3: the announcement was made by Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini during the regional congress of the Tuscan League.
“Marine Le Pen, friends and colleagues from Austria, Germany and Portugal will arrive from all over Europe. We will present to Italy our idea of a Europe that will be based on security, on work for young people, on innovation, on the future, on the protection of borders.” According to Salvini, “the next European elections will not be an electoral campaign: the European elections in June will be a referendum on two different ways of understanding Europe, Tuscany, life, family. on the left, and we see the results: uncontrolled immigration, synthetic steak, Chinese electric cars. It is madness to argue that the entire people should only drive an electric car, which means firing workers in Tuscany and forcing them to work in Beijing; green houses, the family that is not the family”.
The Northern League leader then turned his attention to the economy. “Today some people became disillusioned because the famous rating agencies that were supposed to devalue Italy, instead promoted Italy. I am proud of this first year of center-right government and of what the League has done in this first year of center-right government right”. government.” Salvini concluded his speech by criticizing the progressives. “The left no longer knows where to attack, it even peeps through the keyhole and connects with family issues to create political controversy, but instead we talk about the future.”
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.