Finance Bill: FdI attacks: "Only 7 million of the 11 billion euros will go to agriculture and fishing."
The opposition opposes the Todde administration. Cera: "More than a budget bill, the proposal seems like a law of resignation."Per restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
"An €11 billion budget that allocates only €7.1 million to the primary sectors of agriculture, livestock farming, and fishing is less a Stability Law than a Law of Resignation, demonstrating, once again, its inefficiency."
The first to denounce it was the regional councilor of Fratelli d'Italia Emanuele Cera , who speaks of an "insufficient Todde administration" due to the "little attention paid to the agricultural and fishing sectors".
"The needs complained about by the sector and presented in the Chamber by the minority in recent days through various amendments that have been routinely ignored and forgotten ," Cera continued in a statement. "Prolonged droughts, extreme weather events, wild fauna completely out of control, devastating animal diseases, and a collapsing fisheries industry. What choices they intend to make for the agricultural sector, what reasoning is being used to grow and sustain the existing sector, is unknown. All we know is that the word 'fishing' has been erased from the majority's vocabulary."
«Once again – continues the regional councillor of FdI – our proposals are being "bounced back" by the structural silence of a majority that does not take into account the many requests of citizens, throwing into total despair a sector already tormented by climate change and little more than the 7 million included in art. 4 of the Stability Law is a figure that cannot be considered a serious response».
"We are faced," Cera continues, "with the daily devastation of a Stability Law that chooses inertia, leaving the agricultural and fishing sectors without any guidance. The pig, cattle, sheep and goat, fruit and vegetable, cereal, viticulture, and beekeeping sectors are in extreme difficulty and are asking for concrete help to address not only the many climate emergencies, but also to be able to seriously plan for the future. We need resources, we need more planning, we need political courage, but all we get is a 'deafening silence,'" Cera concludes.
(Unioneonline)
