❓🇮🇹 What now for Italy?

Will there be an election? A referendum on the euro? 2018 will be as big as 2017 I feel and a real tester for the EU and also the Euro.

Shit the bed, we haven’t even had 2017 yet and already it’s a big deal…

Oh you understood this one then? Your head wasn’t in the sand?

I don’t think Italy stand a chance of winning the 2018 world cup

2 Likes

Originally posted by @Barry-Sanchez

Oh you understood this one then? Your head wasn’t in the sand?

Baz the only reason I understood the last one was because it finally got explained (by someone else) a few posts in - I’m just saying it’d be easier all round if you explained things properly from the get-go, then we wouldn’t have to try to work out what you’re on about. Doesn’t really bother me either way to be honest.

3 Likes

Do you think an election will be triggered and do you think the Euro sceptics will win out and then on to France next year and the Netherlands?

Jesus, Barry. How the fuck should I know?

Good point and taken on board.

Originally posted by @Barry-Sanchez

Do you think an election will be triggered and do you think the Euro sceptics will win out and then on to France next year and the Netherlands?

Yawning instead

An election is possible, but not nailed on. The President is likely to look at alternative governments that can be formed first.

This referendum is very different to ours - the effect on the EU won’t be anywhere near like ours. For one, the debate wasn’t focused around Globalisation & Immigration. It effectively became a poll on the PM after he staked his future on it. The populist groups campaigned against it, largely for that reason. But it wasn’t solely due to a populist vote, and the effects internationally won’t be _ that _ significant.

I find it interesting though, that you chose this vote to pick up on and not the election in Austria. Why could that be?

¯_(ツ)_/¯

2 Likes

Should also have said, it does seem that some of the reforms being offered up were pretty shaky also. Which played a part in the out come too.

non lo so.

Italian politics has always been a bit unstable with lots of changes.

1 Like

So, this is the reason(really)?

“Rosa Maria Dell’Aria was last week suspended for 15 days on half pay after an investigation by the education ministry’s provincial authority in Palermo found she had notsupervised” her students’ work.”

When they say not supervised, what do they really mean?

“We have simply enforced the law. Comparing the security decree to a racial law means offending not only Salvini but also the Italian state.”

Offending the opinions of a man and his version of the state, by students, will see the adult in charge punished? That’s a good way to encourage open critical thinking :lou_facepalm_2:

3 Likes