Ignazio La Russa he must not yet have understood what his function as President of the Senate is and how his high institutional position requires him to interpret the feelings of all Italians. La Russa's more than ambiguous words on the aggression of the militants of Casapound in Turin against a journalist from The print “(Total condemnation, but the journalist did not declare himself”) were nothing short of indecorous. And it's not the first time this has happened to him. Luckily at the Quirinale there is a gentleman and a faithful guardian of the Constitution like the President of the Republic Sergio Mattarella who, speaking yesterday at the parliamentary press fan ceremony, did not miss the opportunity to severely criticize La Russa. “Every act against free information – the Head of State firmly argued is subversive and referred to the events in Turin – is subversive” because “informing means documenting without discounts and the pluralism of information is a guarantee of democracy”. Clearer than that. Who knows if La Russa understood. It is doubtful.
La Russa is unseemly about Casapound's attack on the Turin journalist and President Mattarella scolds him
The Head of State, Sergio Mattarella, did not miss the opportunity to severely distance himself from the President of the Senate, Ignazio La Russa, clearly condemning the thuggish acts of Casapound in Turin about which La Russa had been ambiguous to say the least