ma ssmettila di guardare la pagliuzza di BERLUSCONI e guarda la trave pigliata nel da voi elettori di sinistra che avete votato un incompetente
ho un vago sospetto che gran parte dei autodefiniti cogl... che han portato voti all altra metŕ dove non c č silvio... non sappi cosa ha votato, cosa gli č stato promesso, cosa non č stato mantenuto, e cos č successo. xo si lamentano sempre ancora bhoo
Spiacenti ---- č un moderatore/amministratore e non ti č consentito ignorarlo.
ok, ma per ignorare solo al parte utonto ? quella che continua a scriver un mare di caxxate ?
ho un vago sospetto che gran parte dei autodefiniti cogl... che han portato voti all altra metŕ dove non c č silvio... non sappi cosa ha votato, cosa gli č stato promesso, cosa non č stato mantenuto, e cos č successo. xo si lamentano sempre ancora bhoo
e la trave l ha presa l italia tutta purtroppo
inatti ci sarebbe da piangere........ma almeno nel male speriamo di levarci dalla pelle sto FRODI che son secoli che fa furbate e che distrugge ciň che tocca
ROME, Italy (Reuters) -- Italy's president accepted Prime Minister Romano Prodi's resignation on Wednesday following the government's defeat in a Senate vote on foreign policy.
Prodi, in power for nine months, went to the Quirinale (president's palace) after a cabinet crisis meeting.
President Giorgio Napolitano, the supreme arbiter of Italian politics, will hold talks with party leaders on Thursday to discuss the way forward.
Divided over the Afghan war and ties with the U.S. military, Prodi's center-left government was unable to secure enough votes for a motion backing Rome's foreign policy.
There was no constitutional requirement for Prodi to step down. But Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema had said before the Senate vote that the government should resign if it did not command majority support on foreign policy.
Napolitano's options include dissolving parliament and calling an election. He could also ask Prodi to form a new government or broker the formation of a different government, possibly involving technocrats.
The defeat was the most serious setback for Prodi's coalition government, also deeply divided over a host of domestic issues ranging from the budget, pension reform and a bill giving legal recognition to gay and unwed couples.
The parliamentary motion, a broadly worded declaration of support for foreign policy, received 158 votes in favor, below the necessary majority of 160 votes, and was followed by opposition calls for the government to quit.
Prodi's coalition had only a one-seat majority in the Senate but in the past had managed to muster support by calling confidence votes.
Renato Schifani, Senate leader of the biggest opposition party, Forza Italia, held up a copy of Wednesday's La Stampa newspaper which had quoted D'Alema's warning to coalition pacifists who oppose Italy's military presence in Afghanistan.
"I have in my hand one of the most important newspapers in the country with a declaration by Foreign Minister D'Alema: 'Resignation if we have no majority'," Schifani said to cheers from allies.
"There is no majority any more ... There is no Prodi government any more. The Prodi government has fallen in this chamber."
Earlier a political source in the Catholics-to-communists ruling coalition said he expected Prodi to survive the ordeal but said D'Alema, who is also deputy prime minister, would likely resign as foreign minister.
Beyond Afghanistan, where Italy has 1,900 troops on a NATO-led mission, one of the most divisive issues has been a plan to expand a U.S. military base in northern Italy.
Protests against the plan drew tens of thousands of Italians, including some senior coalition members, last weekend.
D'Alema said the government was compelled to allow the base expansion. "Revoking the authorization would have been a hostile act on our part against the United States," he said.
But one leftist senator announced he would resign rather than vote for D'Alema's motion. "I am against the war in Afghanistan and against the U.S. base in Vicenza," said Franco Turigliatto, with the Communist Refoundation party
reuters:
Italy's Prodi quits after foreign policy defeat
Wed Feb 21, 2007 3:36PM EST
ROME (Reuters) - Prime Minister Romano Prodi resigned on Wednesday, just nine months after winning the closest election in Italy's modern history, when his centre-left coalition suffered a Senate defeat on foreign policy.
Prodi's last spell in power almost a decade ago was also cut short by far-left coalition allies. This time they rebelled over keeping Italian troops in Afghanistan and allowing the expansion of a U.S. military base in Italy.
President Giorgio Napolitano accepted Prodi's resignation but Prodi may stay in power.
Napolitano, who will consult politicians on Thursday, could stop short of calling an election and ask for a parliamentary confidence vote in Prodi. He could also ask another leader to form a governing coalition.
The Olive Branch alliance of the core parties in government said they were "ready to renew our full confidence in Prodi".
Prodi, 67, was said by aides to be ready to stay on "if and only if" he got the full support of his majority, which ranges from Catholic centrists to communists and greens.
"Prodi has acknowledged this is a serious crisis and he doesn't have a majority in the Senate," Prodi spokesman Silvio Sircana said. Continued
Spiacenti ---- č un moderatore/amministratore e non ti č consentito ignorarlo.
ok, ma per ignorare solo al parte utonto ? quella che continua a scriver un mare di caxxate ?
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