Thursday, November 10, 2011

Berlusconi asked to resign: better option?

                        
The seat has been very hot and uncomfortable for him but he has remained tough and ‘heady’ to give up. He has survived several votes in the house but could not get over the Key budget vote of 8th November, which manifested his betrayals who consciously absented themselves from the meeting scheduled for the vote. Taking note of the power of the majority in the vote, the opposition group played their expected role but the greatest surprise of Silvio Berlusconi is that some of his own ‘thought members’ were absent in the lower house on the 8th November for the vote and this denied him the majority vote. Behold, it has become a seemingly evidence that Berlusconi has not been ruling with the majority of the house. The question is: would he really heed to the call of the voices echoing resignation? 
                                              THE SENATE ON SEAT

Except that power corrupts and takes hold of the holders, I should have said that it is better for the president to give up power at this moment while telling himself the truth that it has not been easy. The ‘unheard voices’ have been crying from under the seats and the’ loud voices’ have blown trumpets against the government of Silvio, yet the president hears ‘faintly’. The economic situation continues to decline and crisis heightens. Italy continues to loose her 'eternal glories'. There is a constant increase in unemployment, political unrest and insecurity. According to the report of bank of Italy, “Italy had 2.2 million NEETS (people Not in Education, Employment or Training) in that age group in 2010, 23.4% of the total. Italian President Giorgio Napolitano recently called youth unemployment ''central'' to social unrest in Italy, which manifested itself in mid October when an initially peaceful protest against corporate greed and the lack of opportunities for young people attended by around 200,000 people in Rome turned into a riot. Last month statistics agency ISTAT said 29.3% of Italy's 15-to-24-year-olds was out of work in September, the highest level since the beginning of 2004” http://www.ansa.it/web/notizie/rubriche/english/2011/11/08/visualizza_new.html_
         On the other hand, one could imagine the reason while the situation of italy should not be so since the president ‘does not think’ of  anything else expect the ‘political game he will play to survive the ‘hot seat as the president. If the moved resignation would bring an end to age long political crisis of Italy and offer hope to the citizens, let the president take the way of hounor.

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