Liliana Segre: "Will I have to be kicked out of my country again?"
The senator for life: 'These drifts that came out this week in such a striking way have always been there'
2' min read
Key points
2' min read
"I believe that these drifts, let's call them drifts, which have come out in the last week so strikingly, have always been there, hidden, not exhibited, and that with the current government taking advantage of this great power of the right, we are no longer ashamed of anything"" Life senator Liliana Segre enters the debate on the Fanpage investigation with a strong intervention, wondering "if now, at her age, she will have to be kicked out of her country as she once was".
A speech that traces, in terms of intensity, the one he made last 14 May in the Chamber of Palazzo Madama when he spoke during the debate on the premierate and its 'alarming' aspects on which - he said - 'I cannot remain silent'. On that occasion Segre also recalled the Acerbo law, approved in 1923 by a council of ministers chaired by Benino Mussolini, which allowed a party that had exceeded the 25 per cent quorum to have a decisive majority prize.
Donzelli's response
.Giovanni Donzelli, Fdi's organisational manager, takes it upon himself to respond: 'Senator Segre when reflecting on the dangerous germ of anti-Semitism is a symbol of the entire nation. A symbol that must be respected by all without polemics and without instrumentalisation,' he says, throwing water on the fire of controversy. Controversies that have in any case characterised the political day. "The right wing led by Meloni, also in the light of what has emerged from the Fanpage.it investigation, which we are turning over to all the European parliamentary groups, must stay out of the majority in Europe. Among other things, it is she herself, thanks to her alliance with Orban, who has cut herself off. Her ally Salvini talks of a coup d'état, the stuff of psychiatry, but she should learn the rules of democracy. Simply the numbers that emerged from the European elections keep out the anti-European, climate denier, anti-civil rights and anti-social rights right wing that she represents,' says the green Angelo Bonelli.
Schlein: attack on freedom of the press
'It is very serious that the Prime Minister, instead of responding, addressing and taking action on what emerges from the Fanpage investigation, which reveals a very big problem of anti-Semitism, racism and apologia for fascism, has taken the opportunity for a very strong attack on the freedom of the press and the freedom of journalists. It is as if he said it would be better not to come out,' recoils PD secretary Elly Schlein. 'Instead, citizens have the right to know what goes on inside the party that expresses the Prime Minister of this country. And it is incredible that Meloni has not found the strength to distance herself and expel these people,' she added.
Rampelli: National Youth is a healthy movement
"Let's not talk nonsense. Gn is a healthy movement. No one can notice, except by peeking through the keyhole, what a person is doing in a room. And no one can politically be responsible for horrible jokes and gestures made privately,' cuts short Chamber of Deputies vice-president and Fdi exponent Fabio Rampelli.

