Analyst Andi Bushati sees the debate caused in the Education Commission between two groups of the Democratic Party as a clash between the opposition and the government.
He says that in the middle of this clash, a minimal fragment of the opposition was inserted which has decided to serve the government, but this does not change the framework of the fable.
According to him, the problem is when a part of the opposition is in a fierce battle with the parliamentary majority, can a small part of the opposition join the government and adds that this was done by Lulzim Basha's deputies.
Yesterday, Basha said in words that not allowing investigative commissions and changing the law is a mistake. Most of the opposition MPs are protesting about this.
I understand many MPs who do not want physical confrontations, but to take a position that benefits Edi Rama is a little too much.
The idea is that often, not only in this last clash, we try to reflect this as a clash between two oppositions.
We have a fundamental clash in the arena of the parliament, between a government that will not recognize any right of the opposition and the deputies who want to make a real opposition and find different ways, sometimes radical, to say that this majority cannot to go beyond what the law and the Constitution provide for,' says Bushati.
As for the electoral reform, as OSCE representatives have held meetings with the Bardhi and Re-establishment MPs group, Bushati says that he does not believe that it is a step towards consensus.
'We are witnessing how Edi Rama acted with the electoral reforms. He has always found sold pieces of the opposition, to make a majority and electoral reforms.
What seems funny to me is simpler, we have been in this country for 30 years and as soon as the elections are over we say we will do electoral reform.
But there is no electoral reform that can neutralize the will to steal votes by vote stealers.
The problem is not the law, but the government that has decided to steal votes and there is no will or law that prevents this.
I don't say that Rama is using Basha in this case, maybe he is using him in many other things, but Basha knows that he is a minimal and negligible part of the opposition, but not in the case of electoral reform.
If we had elections today with this electoral law, the Bashists would disappear from the Albanian parliament.
In order for this not to happen, Basha wants to change the system, making it a national proportional, where even with 2, 3 or 4% a small party can have its representatives.
With the electoral reform, Basha does not serve Edi Rama, but his goal of survival,' said the analyst for MCN TV.
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