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Government, from work to cannabis: all the laws that the crisis has thrown into a tailspin

The victory of the No vote in the referendum, the resignation of Matteo Renzi and the government crisis have blocked the process of some very important regulations that risk getting bogged down before obtaining the definitive ok from Parliament, nullifying a job that lasted months and months.

The victory of the No vote in the referendum, the resignation of Matteo Renzi and the government crisis have blocked the process of some very important regulations which risk getting bogged down before obtaining the definitive ok from Parliament, frustrating a job that lasted months and months.

Among the various measures parked, the proposal relating to the legalization of cannabis, returned to the committee after a very rapid passage in the Chamber.

In stand-by also one of the measures that in the recent past had been defined as fundamental, namely the reform of the criminal process wanted by the Minister of Justice Andrea Orlando. To be clear, it is the law that should have introduced the new rules on prescription and wiretapping, already approved by Montecitorio and which should have arrived at Palazzo Madama on 7 December.

The proposal relating to the possibility of giving the son the will also remain at stake double surname, including that of the mother. The law was approved by the House two years ago and has since been lost in the maze of the Senate.

Among the rules at risk, it is impossible not to forget the Jobs Act which concerns the reform of public employment which, due to the victory of the No vote in the constitutional referendum of 4 December, will remain a competing matter between the State and the Regions.

Also stop the law on Cyberbullying approved by Montecitorio last September and stopped in committee in the Senate.

The future of the nebulous reform of the PA after the declaration of unconstitutionality of last November 24 by the Constitutional Court. At risk is above all the rule concerning the cunning of the card. In parallel also the Consolidated Act on Public Employment, never written, risks never seeing the light. The provision should have eliminated the two pillars of state employees, i.e. permanent jobs and seniority increases, but should also have contained the renewal of the state employee contract based on the rules established by the framework agreement signed by the unions on 30 November.

Finally, among the regulations at risk are the Competition Law Decree, the reform of cooperative banks (blocked by the Council of State), the Ius Soli, the Pact for Rome and the package of environmental laws.

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