“Let’s just say my private problems were talked about harshly at times, but eventually I put my mind to it and we fought.” Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said this in an interview on the river into the microphones of Rtl 102.5. “I have very few secrets, now my life is out in the open…” the Prime Minister joked. Kim then also joked about the Forbes ranking, which lists her as the fourth most influential woman in the world in 2023: “Imagine how we are…”.
Is it a tough year? “Yes, that’s the easiest word to describe a year when everything that could possibly happen happened; the secret is to live day by day, as Rambo would say,” Meloni said. “We try to deal with every problem in the most pragmatic and serious way possible, acting in the interests of Italian citizens. In the disaster we manage, results are coming that show that the job is done seriously.”
Politics and robe conflict
Many topics were touched upon in the interview, from financial maneuvering to the relationship with the robe. “We are trying to create conflict between politics and the judiciary,” Meloni said. “I do not see a contradiction, and this cannot come from me, who has great respect for those who serve the State. I think that politics and the judiciary should work together to strengthen the fight against crime and accelerate justice. We want a very small but loud section of the judiciary in Italy, for ideological reasons, to “It is a fact that he believes that a government which he does not accept should not enforce its provisions or influence political debate.”
“I was surprised, for example, by the ANO saying that institutional reform was an attack on the judiciary, that it was not affected by it and that it had an anti-democratic orientation, but I know that this concerns a small part of society.” “I still think justice reform needs to be done,” he explains.
“Difficult maneuver, we were starting from a complex situation”
The Prime Minister admitted that “it is a difficult task” regarding the budget law. “Everyone does this job well when there is money… Starting from a very complex situation, we put two figures in order: we have another $13 billion in debt interest due to the increase in ECB interest rates and another $20 billion in our super bonus. We started with -33 billion but still have 28 billion.” We have maneuvered to focus resources on a few key priorities, such as protecting families’ purchasing power, protecting co-payments, combining tax reform with an increase in the top two rates and adjusted pensions, particularly the lowest rates on health, to an all-time high. “We were also interested in family and birth rates.”
“Italians will decide on the position of Prime Minister”
On the subject of institutional reforms, according to Meloni, the criticisms directed at the prime minister’s office show that: “We do not know what to say, since we have not touched upon the role of the president, in this case Sergio Mattarella. He is a figure who represents an absolute point of reference for Italians,” he said. “Sovereignty belongs to the people,” the Prime Minister said, and the price Italy has paid the most in its history is the instability of governments. I think this is the reform that the others are committed to and I know they will do anything. To prevent its ratification, I think we will eventually have a referendum and ask the Italians what they want to do. I know there will be many people who will oppose this, but the Italians will do it. “They must decide whether they will be masters of their own destiny or whether they will continue to outsource it to those who think they are masters of institutions but are not.”
Minimum wage: “No laws from M5s and Pd”
“Conflict in the Parliament over the minimum wage? I smile a little: M5S, Pd tell us that the only thing that needs to be done in Italy is the minimum wage, but they have not done this in the government for ten years” Those who took to the streets to demand the minimum wage and then continued to negotiate collective agreements and I am recently struck by the situation of some unions accepting contracts of just over five euros per hour, as in the case of the private security contract. consistent”.
Giulia’s femicide: “There are men who do not accept women’s freedom”
The Prime Minister also spoke at length about the femicide of Giulia Cecchettin. “Yesterday was a day that could be a turning point, the public participation in Giulia’s funeral, the father’s words, a day that could represent the beginning of something new in the tragedy at a cultural level,” emphasized Kavun. “The real question is: whoever used Giulia’s murder for some political exploitation made a big mistake,” he added. “This is something we all need to ask ourselves in a world that is changing so rapidly that we may not fully understand it.”
“I think,” the Prime Minister continued, “the problem is always the same: there are men who do not accept women’s liberation, women’s liberation, and therefore they do not accept no. This is the underlying element of the problem and this is what we must fight every day. There are laws, much more at the cultural level.” We can do more. The real problem is the lack of culture, the crisis of families and our education system. The problem is that we do not understand how much Covid affects the younger generations in terms of their ability to socialize, we do not realize the role played by new technologies and social media, these messages are increasingly nihilism, “It’s characterized by the culture of easy money, easy sex, how influenced they are. As a mother, I say this: I’m not sure we can understand everything that’s going on on mobile phones and social media, and I don’t know if we can really deal with it.”
Continue reading today…
Source: Today IT
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.