“The position of the Democratic Party on the constitutional referendum remains one.” The dozen MPs who have made official their no to the constitutional referendum did not particularly care about Matteo Renzi. If only because eight of the ten MPs the day before yesterday announced their no, they voted the reform at every step. A sudden change of position complicated to explain, but after all, you are right on the front renziano, “helps” that “demonstrates the voter as part of the elect are ready to change their minds in order to keep the chair.” In the next legislature, without the Senate, the armchairs there will be less and the approach of the referendum date is likely to accentuate the internal convulsions of political parties, majority and opposition.
PULL
The discussion “surreal”, as he called the head of Sergio Mattarella State, the exact date of the referendum, should end soon. Between Monday and Tuesday, the Supreme Court is expected to rule and pass the word to the government that has sixty days to propose a date to the head of state who is between fifty and seventy days. Calendar in hand, if you want to proceed with the surreal debate, you could get up close to Christmas. Perhaps by inserting a number of concerns: the law of stability to the mission in Libya. The prevailing feeling within the Democratic Party is instead Renzi does not intend to take it too much for too long not to give the impression of fear the polls. Or worse you want to move the vote so as to present a complacent stability law.
The acceleration of the Supreme Court may then push the prime minister to move, ending a ballet source of political instability now that the referendum is considered the crossroads of the legislature. For days, the prime minister has changed attitude on the referendum. It does not make it more an almost personal matter – although it has not changed his mind about his political future in case of defeat – and let within the party, of which he is Secretary, to develop an opposite hand, however still small, not put hand to disciplinary measures or public insults. And in fact the strategy to ignore, as much as possible, the internal minority allows the premier to shy away from a confrontation that hides the substance of the reform that clears the Senate, the Cnel, collapses the provinces by the Constitution, and rewrites the relationship between the state and complicated regions in the reform of Title V of 1996.
The government’s message to convince the undecided he explained yesterday the Minister Woods when he argued that “we have the opportunity to take a step forward” and that “in the fall we can not think that this lost opportunity there will be another between six months”. “At nothing beats something that is perfectible.” The reasoning can convince some undecided to go to the polls, perhaps holding your nose, but not the left of the Democratic Party which instead waits for a signal from the Prime Minister in terms of the electoral law. Renzi does not intend to take dell’Italicum change commitments. The front that challenges the law is broad, but not able to get together on an alternative plan if not that of a super proportional which would make the country ungovernable for the benefit of the M5S that, while having the potential to become the first party, refuses the logic of alliances and coalitions.
PARTY
Robert Hope and Pier Luigi Bersani, however, require persons joining the election campaign for the yes to an explicit assurance of the Prime Minister to change the electoral law. Renzi does not seem willing to give in to the pressures of the inside left. A rift has also emerged yesterday on the home front. That is the document that should open the door to a re-organization of the Democratic Party. The party chairman, Matthew Orfini, takes it for ready and agreed with all but is not of the same opinion on bersaniano Nico Stumpo.
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