After the humiliation received by the premier Giorgia Meloni and by his Northern League leader Matteo Salvini on extra tax on banks, the Minister of Economy, Giancarlo Giorgetti raise your head. He had already done so over the weekend by openly sponsoring his predecessor's candidacy Daniel Franco on the board of the ECB, but he did it even more yesterday at CL meeting in Rimini warning that the next budget maneuver, where it will be necessary to find at least 30 billion without making a deficit, "it will be complicated" and that the electoral dreams of the League and of the Brothers of Italy will have to remain in the drawer. Fortunately. The few resources available will be allocated to medium-low incomes and to growth, but pensions and flat taxes are out of the question. The abolition of Fornero law and the lowering of the retirement age is no longer on the agenda: "No pension reform can hold up with our birth rate numbers" warns the minister who also archives the dreams of the right on the flat tax. Bravo Giorgetti, finally a bath of realism. Now it will be necessary to see if Meloni and above all Salvini, in the pathetic search to recover electoral consensus at all costs, will hold up. But Giorgetti's first step goes in the right direction.
Giorgetti, goodbye to the abolition of the Fornero pension law and goodbye to the flat tax: finally some realism
After the slap received on the extra tax on banks, the Northern League minister of the Economy finally raises his head on the budget maneuver: goodbye to the electoral dreams of the right on pensions and the flat tax. But will he hold up Giorgetti's realism to the test of Meloni and Salvini?