Is chameleon the right word for the Giorgia Meloni seen this year? With this question, Luca Sappino and Alessio Orsingher, presenters of Tagadà on La7, opened the debate with Agnese Pini, director of the Quotidiano Nazionale, guest of the December 28th episode of the talk show: “It is correct in the sense that there is something else.” Meloni from the one we knew before he became Prime Minister. It is also true that you have taken on an institutional role in a role of this type. The most important results must be attributed above all to the way Meloni has established and developed alliances and relationships with key international partners. The Meloni government is currently one of the strongest in Europe. Macron is installed by Le Pen, Scholz is put in trouble by his own allies, Sanchez, who is holding himself together with great difficulty, in short, in a context of highly uncertain leadership in Europe, facing the June elections, Meloni and his government definitely go there with the strongest leadership. “It has built a chameleonic credibility in this sense, because in the years of opposition and hard and pure struggle its relations with Europe and with other international allies were even more soured.”
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“In my opinion – continues Pini in his analysis of the center-right government – the reform plan was the figure that punished the Meloni government the most this year. They arrived a year and a half ago and said that the state should not punish those who wanted to do things and therefore proposed a government that had a great impact on the ease of the state, simplification, the fight against bureaucracy, etc “With regard to the efficiency of public administration, the tax issue and the relationship between citizens and tax, the government has made little move on all these issues.”