
There is a sense that is perpetuated by the people of the DP, while they are unable to see the change and what the public is asking of them: We are under a regime and we must fight this regime, it seems like that is the leitmotif of everything.
Edi Rama, the leader of the Socialist Party, makes the news and its entire structure himself, and it even seems as if he thinks about its impact. He launches a campaign, denounces irregularities in local government structures and beyond, accuses them of failures and predicts what he will do in the future.
The opposition, through Mr. Berisha, is almost daily providing a scheme of what harmed them in the elections and making accusations, while placing emphasis on the use of the administration and the identification of the majority with the state, a phenomenon that they themselves once realized when they were at the head of the country.
The leader of the Democratic Party, Berisha, constantly under the same questions from journalists about the so-called "Basha" article of the statute, has the standard answer ready: "Now, the statute is in order, there is no need for any changes at the moment. Of course, after we finalize the denunciation in Albania and the world of the electoral farce, the Democratic Party will make a complete analysis of all the problems in order to modernize and open up more and more."
There is a sense that is perpetuated by the people of the DP, while they are unable to see the change and what the public is asking of them: We are under a regime and we must fight this regime, it seems like that is the leitmotif of everything.
In fact, the regime after the '90s is democratic, but its hybridization has already moved away from democracy, and we are faced with this in the way elections are held, the separation of powers, and the way public wealth is distributed, to name but a few other issues.
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