Friday, February 25, 2011

Steps By Step Procedure Of Lasik

GO AHEAD BUT the legal system and 'Long settlement

Giacomo Stucchi

It 's a long political week that ends with a return to the Senate for the second vote of confidence, the so-called Decree Milleproroghe. A measure, not adopted by the majority for the first time and already in use with the center-left governments, as amended by the amendments (some bipartisan) arising from the parliamentary work, but on which the opposition is once again able to make a sterile controversy. Napolitano's remarks to the decree, in fact, were not and are not dictated by censorious spirit against the majority, as is the usual pundits would have you believe the left. Firstly because the provision in question was gradually changed in the classrooms and gentlemen, with the support of all political forces, and secondly because the president of the Republic, in his letter, did not place absolute veto. Well then Minister Tremonti has to climb the Hill to explain to the President of the contents of the maxi amendment tabled by the Government, which replaced the old text of the decree, and on which the Chamber voted confidence. The Senate, meanwhile, will remain open on Saturday to allow the final green light to the issue. Leaving the technical language but the point is that the parliamentary opposition, as always in this legislature has since begun to hope that we can throw down with the judicial Berlusconi has lost another opportunity to adopt a constructive attitude for the good of the country. Also on municipal federalism, as we saw with the vote in the Senate, the Government is following the path indicated by Napolitano and there is no reason to believe, especially after the recent utterances quirinalizie broadly in support of our reform, the existence of barriers preventing them from bringing about at home all the other decrees on fiscal federalism. Good point, in this sense, is certainly the thickening of the parliamentary group of the PDL and the consequent depletion of the Fli that, especially in the House, will likely balance of representation in both the Bicameral Commission, both in the permanent ones, and to therefore proceed without further hitches whatsoever. On everything that is happening in Parliament, but in relations between the institutions, there is to it, however, a general consideration. Should be in the interest of all political forces to recognize that our legal system in some passages is very cumbersome. Some "tricks" of legislation had indeed a sense in the early days of the Republic, when the system of checks and balances exorcised any temptation undemocratic, but today's politics, and especially the very short time within which it must give the same answers to meet the needs citizens, are profoundly changed.

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