Share

Anti-corruption bill, Pd and Monti sprint to get the measure voted in Parliament

For Enrico Letta, deputy secretary of the Pd "the anti-corruption law must be approved immediately" - Vietti, of the CSM also speaks of "public degradation of the country" - Monti pushes for the approval of the provision in Parliament and points the finger at the Pdl which hesitates despite the Lazio scandal

Anti-corruption bill, Pd and Monti sprint to get the measure voted in Parliament

After a brief period of silence, the proposal to vote on the anti-corruption bill returns to the scene, above all by the Democratic Party, led by PierLuigi Bersani.

Its return as one of the main issues in politics these days is obviously accelerated by the scandal of the Lazio Region, which last night led to the resignation of the governor of the junta elected in 2008, Renata Polverini.

The first on the list in the forcing to vote on the anti-corruption law is Enrico Letta, deputy secretary of the Democratic Party, who explains: “Now the reaction to what happened must be strong and dry. The anti-corruption law must be approved immediately. The government goes ahead and the Parliament supports it. We are here. This is the only answer to give politics a minimum of credibility.”

Even the Superior Council of the Judiciary, through its vice president Michele Vietti, is on the same line: "I think we can't turn a blind eye to the deterioration of the country's public customs" and continues by saying that it is important "to avoid what Cardinal Bagnasco rightly defined the anger of the honest” and for this reason it is important to act promptly. Furthermore, the vice president of the CSM does not rule out the hypothesis that the Palazzo dei Marescialli can give its opinion on the anti-corruption decree law "in a spirit of collaboration" with the Parliament.

But it's not just Letta and Vietti who are pushing for a vote by Parliament: Prime Minister Mario Monti is also pushing for the vote on the decree-law in Parliament, pointing the finger at the various hesitations of the PDL.

Finally, the Minister of Public Administration Patroni Griffi denounces corruption not only in the political sphere but also in the corporate sphere, arguing that corrupt companies grow 25% less than they could grow.

comments