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This article was published on 8 October 2014 at 09:30.
The last change is the 8 October 2014 at 20:06.
Long day in the Senate to approve the Jobs Act, the enabling law for the reform of work. After a frantic morning – with the protests M5S which prevented the Labour Minister Giuliano Poletti to finish his speech – the Minister for Institutional Reform, Maria Elena Boschi, presented in the Senate a maxi-amendment which entirely replaces the bill and has placed reliance on this text. No mention of the provision in Article 18, but a delegated decree – announced Poletti – eliminate the reinstatement for economic dismissals and limited to discriminatory dismissals and the more serious cases of disciplinary dismissals.
The first called for the vote of confidence was set at 21 in the afternoon but the times have been stretched. The debate on the timing of the work of the Assembly, decided by a majority of the conference of leaders, went for long. The calendar was approved in new protests – including the launch of papers and books against the President of the Senate, Pietro Grasso – only around 19, blocking the work of the Budget Committee which must be expressed on the financial backing of the maxi-amendment. Grasso has suspended the session. The meeting will resume at 20 with a general discussion on the maxi-amendment. 23 At the first call of the vote of confidence.
Bagarre M5S. Renzi: “I worried about unemployment, not the opposition,”
The announcement of the Woods has arrived in the late morning after the brawl broke out in the House to the Senate with shouts, signs, some push and some coins to the government benches. The President Grasso, due to protests during the operation of the M5S Poletti, has suspended the session (which is resumed at 16), after having expelled the leader of M5S Vito Petrocelli, which is nestled between the banks refusing to leave the ‘hemicycle. “They can contestarci but the real truth is that this country change it. Do not give up an inch and tenaciously reach the goal, “the premier said Matteo Renzi in Assago (Milan) on the subject of protests in Poletti, who eventually handed the text of his speech without being able to conclude. And in the evening Renzi deplored the attitude of the senators: “If every time we present the reforms in Senate must attend these dramatized is not of concern to me concerned about unemployment than the opposition.” Adding that the Jobs Act will be approved tonight: “We waited twenty years and my senators have no problem waiting a few hours to bring home the result.”
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