Consult: ‘secret’ decree, parliamentary appeal rejected

(ANSA) – MILAN, 23 JUN – If the right to know what is being voted is harmed, it is not the individual parliamentarian who can appeal but only the assembly. In summary, this is the principle expressed by the Constitutional Court in relation to an appeal on the attribution of state powers presented, among others, by Senator Gregorio De Falco and Deputy Stefano Fassina. The dispute was Article 7 of the decree law, last September, on infrastructures and transport, including the sale of assets, including the fleet, by Alitalia to Ita Airways, which was deemed consistent with the decisions of the European Commission.

Decisions – according to the applicants – ‘secret’.

The order of the Consulta is contested by the Cub Trasporti – which disseminated the text published on the website of the Constitutional Court – which together with the Navaid and Usb unions promoted the presentation of the parliamentary appeal.

In particular, the CUB disputes “the ad hoc decree which attempts to circumvent the obligation to transfer workers from Alitalia to Ita, legitimizing that only 2,000 employees out of 10,000 have obtained the job with enormous damage for Fiumicino, Linate and Malpensa; now in Italy the number of employees has risen to around 3,000 due to hiring decided independently by the Company “.

Antonio Amoroso, national secretary of Cub Trasporti, denounced that “it is incredible that parliamentarians vote, moreover, a trust in the government, without having the texts that in this case refer to decisions of the secret EU transport commission”. “Even more absurd is that the Council – he concluded – maintains that the parliamentarians were informed by reading the press releases published by the EU Commission”.

(HANDLE).

Source: Ansa

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