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The Quirinale’s warning echoed loud and clear in the corridors of Palazzo Chigi: in this delicate historical moment, the government must march together in the fight against the coronavirus. The dynamics of power implicitly implied the President of the Republic, Sergio Mattarella, only contribute to poisoning an already tense climate due to the pandemic. It is clear that the descent to the Campo del Colle indicates some dissatisfaction, if not impatience, with the way the premier Giuseppe Conte he is managing the health emergency. Partly due to the lack of participation from Parliament and partly due to the country’s recovery plan that is still lacking.
In recent months, Conte has made promise after promise, including bonuses and massive financial aid from Brussels. The problem, as Marco Antonellis pointed out in Italy today, is that neither of us know each other Projects nor the priorities of the Giallorossi government. At the moment there is room on the table for a useless shopping list from the various ministries and little else. In other words: Italians still don’t know what will happen to the money coming from Europe. And not just those.
To make matters worse, there is a substantial climate of uncertainty that fuels general discontent. Also because Colle would like to anti-recession plan clear and defined. And, to date, there is not even the shadow of a relaunch strategy on the executive’s agenda. The government gives the sensation of navigating in plain sight, displaced by the virus and without the necessary leadership, both to deal with Covid-19 and, above all, the economic emergency.
The absence of an economic recovery plan
As if that were not enough, the comparison with others European countries It further complicates Conte’s position. While the prime minister has focused on the vaccine, even venturing its arrival in December, there are those in Europe who have already drawn up economic and financial plans to leave the recession behind.
There are two key points where the Giallorossi government is failing miserably. The first refers tohealth emergency: the management of the coronavirus does not convince either in terms of some restrictive measures or because of how Conte (did not) involve the opposition, many times without going through Parliament. The second point is the economic one: as mentioned, there are no recovery plans on the horizon.
The greater attention of QuirinalApart from Covid, it is dependent on job creation and plans to be sent to Brussels to get money from the Recovery Fund. Bonuses and soft drinks are just a palliative. To restart the country, real institutional cooperation of the subjects involved is needed, from the opposition to the local authorities, and a vision of the future. The one who, at least so far, has shown that he does not have Conte.