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President Obama to Visit Pope Francis
Mass Grave Unearthed Below the Uffizi
Delivery Service 055 386 03 11 www.mrpizzafirenze.it
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Watch March Madness Live
Travel Europe’s Eastern Loop
www.florencenewsevents.com MARCH 2014, No.5
Via Pietrapiana, 82/r Piazza Duomo, 5/r
Politics, Leopard-Style Pippo Russo
Mayor of Italy wouldn’t be possible until Parliament creates a new law to ensure the election of more stable majorities. Reactions among Florentines have been divided. Criticisms leveled at the leader include his relatively youthful age. Now 39, Renzi’s political career began just ten years ago when he held the Presidency of the Florence Province (2004-2009), after which he was elected mayor of Florence (2009-2014).
A new development has departed from Florence that we would have rather avoided. It is that of an extra-parliamentary crisis that suddenly erupted, for no reason other than that of personal ambition. Everything happened with lightning speed. The explanations given to justify the events continue to be few and barely plausible. The fact remains that what happened breaks the mold in a way that is perhaps definitive, and its consequences on the Italian political system and its rules have yet to be measured. For some, this is the sign of new politics. A turning point, comparable to Nicolas Sarkozy’s candidacy for the presidency of the French Republic. In that case, the value of this discontinuity was exalted as something that renewed French politics by breaking the pattern. But then things went in a different direction, and Sarkozy’s inglorious end demonstrates that breaking the pattern is in itself not enough if a political project is unable to deliver more than just political communication. The fact remains that with the nomination of Matteo Renzi as prime minister a fracture has occurred in Italian politics as well: a discontinuity that is generally greeted as positive because it breaks patterns that needed to be broken.
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Appointed Prime Minister, Renzi Promises Ambitious Changes Lauren Boyd Former Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi captured the attention of the country in February when he became the youngest Italian Prime Minister in the post-war era. On February 17, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano asked Renzi to form a new government, which was proposed on February 21. Renzi assumed office on February 22. The new Premier replaced Enrico Letta, whom Renzi forced out of office by convincing the Democratic Party to withdraw its support from the
10-month-old government and back a new one, according to the BBC. Critics are unhappy with the way Renzi was appointed, believing that he reverted to old Italian tactics in taking over the country without election. Now the third prime minister in three years to be appointed without an election, Renzi says he wants to change how politicians are voted for in hopes that Italian citizens will have a say in who their next prime minister is. Italians wanted the right to vote on their future governing body, but President Napolitano said that new elections
Celebrating Women’s Day on March 8
PITTI ‘TASTE’ RETURNS MARCH 8-10
The Florentine New Year on March 25
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