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A representative for G. Nausėda says the candidate did not give a “very specific answer” about the team.
“It is very important for the president that the new leadership of the ministry has a lot of leadership and experience in managing change, so if in some aspects the minister himself lacks that experience, it is very important what team he will have to help implement those. changes, “on Wednesday after the president’s meeting with K. Anomaitis told reporters Antanas Bubnelis.
“The president asked the candidate questions about the team, but did not receive a very specific response,” he added.
For his part, K. Adomaitis said that he had mentioned several candidates for the Presidency. According to him, when looking for vice ministers, he chooses “is from what.”
“I see this situation very broadly, I understand that it is necessary to fill separate areas with competent specialists who have knowledge and work in this field,” K. Adomaitis told reporters.
“I accept recommendations from everyone, I speak both with my party colleagues and with people who work in the sector,” he added.
Speaking about priorities, A.Bubnelis emphasized that the president had a positive response to K. Adomaitis’s approach on the use of technology, improving the accessibility of public transport and the position on greener transport.
K. Adomaitis said that he emphasized that the Ministry of Transport and Communications lacks a strategic vision for the next 10-20 years.
“The preparation of the strategy is delayed, which automatically hinders investments in the field of transport, since it is not clear what the priorities will be in Lithuania,” said the candidate.
According to K. Adomaitis, he presented the president with three things he wants to bring to the ministry: a green course, a qualitative leap in project implementation, and transparency and openness.
K. Adomaitis, nominated to the ministers by the Freedom Party, is the third government candidate to meet with the president on Wednesday.
Previously, K. Adomaitis was a member of the Vilnius Council, he worked in the private sector as an urban economist. He studied economics, finance, psychology, and political science.
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