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Letta-Renzi, February 20, the day of truth

The secretary of the Democratic Party Matteo Renzi sets a deadline for the Government: by February 20 it will be evaluated whether to go ahead by supporting it, change pace (and we will see whether to also change premiers with a relay), or even go immediately to the elections – Meanwhile on Twitter: "It's better for me to vote, but not for Italy".

Letta-Renzi, February 20, the day of truth

The secretary of the Democratic Party Matteo Renzi once again puts Prime Minister Enrico Letta on the ropes: February 20 is only 14 days away, exactly two weeks, and the date is particularly important, given that Renzi has suddenly indicated it as the deadline to pass or fail the government and decide, if anything, to “change the scheme”. That is, out of the political jargon, to bring down the curtain on the Letta government.

At Palazzo Chialready the blow came strong. Letta, who before the management had had a brief face-to-face conversation with Matteo Renzi, doesn't make a fuss about being official.

“Our answers knowno in government activity, for us the key step remains next week and the approval of the electoral law, after which we will speak with the Democratic Party without any preclusion and it would be strange if this were not the case ", is the accommodation that comes from Palazzo Chigi , where one is very careful not to raise the tone and where the prime minister returns, without listening to Renzi's reply, for a working meeting on the Land of Fires decree and to receive two international guests. But what until yesterday for Letta were "transatlantic chatter" have now become official requests in the direction of the Democratic Party.

In fact, Renzi no longer wants to waste time, and has three options in hand without excluding anything: go ahead by supporting the government, change pace (and we'll see if we can also change premiers with a relay), or even go straight to the elections. The answer within this month. “We are one step away from a historic reform: Senate, provinces, electoral law, Title V", wrote Matteo Renzi on Twitter, adding: "It is better for me to vote, but not for Italy".

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