Meloni, the text message read live: "I'm sick but I work, I have no union rights"
The sketch at Un giorno da pecora, the prime minister from Budapest responds to FdI deputy Osnato. Two days ago, due to the flu, she had postponed the meeting with the unions on the budgetGeorgia Meloni (Ansa)
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Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni indirectly protagonist of a sketch on “Un giorno da pecora”.
A guest on the Rai Radio1 programme, FdI MP Marco Osnato, president of the Budget Committee, seconded the hosts Geppi Cucciari and Giorgio Lauro by sending a message to the Prime Minister to ask her how she was after days struggling with the flu .
"I was forced by those from 'Un giorno da pecora' to ask you how you are," the message sent and read live by Osnato, who a few minutes later received and reported Meloni's response: "Badly in truth, but since I don't have any particular union rights, I'm in Budapest for the European Council to do my job."
The confrontation with the unions
Just a few days ago, the meeting between the government and the unions on the budget was postponed. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who has the flu, postponed the meeting and sent everyone back to next Monday, the first available date since her week will continue abroad with the summit of the European political community and the informal European Council in Budapest.
The requests of the workers' representatives remain, for now, on stand-by, waiting for a signal from the government called to respond on what the Cgil has defined as the "fair of cuts". The unions already considered the call late, then skipped, because it arrived with the maneuver already in Parliament and therefore with little margin for intervention . Expectations, during a new week of waiting, are destined to drop even more.
For the Cgil, the maneuver is insufficient on many fronts. One above all the wedge, where there is "a zero-balance round trip" with the 17 billion more in Irpef for workers and pensioners this year. "Totally" disappointing also for the Uil which, in the absence of responses, together with the Cgil keeps the general strike of November 29 on the table. The position of the Cisl is different, which sees some positive interventions but opposes the cuts in schools, in the automotive fund, and asks for an extra effort on minimum pensions. Next week, Wednesday, the government will also meet with businesses.
(Unioneonline/D)