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Bersani: "Yes to Monti, but not at all costs"

Pierluigi Bersani, guest of Radio Anch'io, returns to his opening yesterday to the centrist forces led by Mario Monti: "Available to address them, but convergences are not made at all costs" - On the Mps case: "The Pd it has nothing to do with it” – On work: “We need to give stability to the precarious situation”.

Bersani: "Yes to Monti, but not at all costs"

Yes to Monti, but without forcing. Thus Pierluigi Bersani, a guest on Radio Anch'io this morning, wanted to return to yesterday's openness towards the centrist forces: "I ask for 51 percent, but that I will turn to alternative forces to Berlusconi and the League as if I had 49 % of votes. And therefore they are very willing to turn to forces like that of professor Monti".

On a possible, and very complicated, coexistence between Vendola and Monti Bersani he minimized: "Just read our Charter of intent: it says that in contrast to the populist regressions of a European and national right, we have an attitude of openness against pro-European and constitutional forces. It is clear, however, that convergences are not done at all costs, must be put to the test of programs”.

Some questions are inevitable on the MPS case. Bersani defended the extraneousness of the Pd: "It has nothing to do with the banking affair", predicting that any liability can be traced back to "three cornerstones: how derivatives are regulated, tax shield and false accounting", three points on which, the candidate for prime minister promised, “We will intervene immediately: from the next day, the crime of false accounting will return, we will regulate derivatives and we will never again have an amnesty, I am a totally alternative to Berlusconi in this field. It is a shame that we are talking about a burial amnesty again, we have not even managed to collect ”. Bersani then spoke of the regulatory weight of banking foundations in Italy, defining it "excessive".

The secretary of the Democratic Party then closed with an attack on the League on milk quotas, and addressing the issue of the Fornero reform, in the light of the modification proposals put forward by Pietro Ichino. The crux, for Bersani, is that of “give stability to precarious work“, despite the impossibility of implementing Danish-style flexsecurity: “in Italy we are not in these conditions: we have to face 700 fewer jobs, and this is the emergency we have to respond to”.

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