The perplexities of the Quirinale behind the stop to the extension of the Balneari

The perplexities of the Quirinale behind the stop to the extension of the Balneari

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Il Colle expresses his opposition to the extension of the concessions promised by the government. The possible formal notice by the European Commission (and the contradiction with the sentence of the Council of State) is worrying

It was thought to be accounting. Instead it is the Colle. In fact, it is not a negative note from the General Accounting Office of the state that blocks the extension procedure for the seaside resorts in the Senate. It’s something much more important. The doubts about the text proposed by the majority come directly from the Quirinale. To explain it to a small group of Azzurri colleagues, just outside the Hall of Palazzo Madama, is Maurizio Gasparri, great champion of beach managers. “But it’s not the Mef that is against it. It’s the Quirinal“, hisses the blue senator. And up there, at the Colle, in fact they don’t deny it.

The extension of the beach concessions exposes the country to an inevitable formal notice by the European Commission, at a time when, moreover, the dialogue between Rome and Brussels is very delicate due to the verification of the objectives of the Pnrr. But there’s more. There is a ruling by the State Council, which would be blatantly contradicted by the approval of the offending amendment. And there is a pending ruling by the European Court of Justice which in all likelihood would immediately void all the extension concessions. In short, there is enough to alarm the Colle offices. In fact, while fully respecting Parliament’s autonomy, they have signaled some critical issues in the current formulation of the amendments included in the Milleproroghe concerning bathing establishments. And it is for this reason that Minister Luca Ciriani, in charge of Relations with Parliament, is now trying, taking his time, to find a compromise, on the side of Palazzo Chigi.

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The bluff of the majority



  • Valerio Valentini

  • Born in L’Aquila, in 1991. Grew up in Collemare, up there in the Apennines. Classical high school diploma, degree in Modern Literature at the University of Trento. Al Foglio since 2017. I wrote a book, “Gli 80 di Camporammaglia”, published by Laterza, with which I won the Campiello Opera Prima award in 2018. I like good books and good cinema. And cycling, everything, even the bad stuff.

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