
Edi Rama has turned his attention to the ministers. A meeting with members of the Government, political leaders of the regions, directors of central agencies, including Taxes and Customs, is scheduled to take place, where each will be 'tested' for their work...
In the May 11 elections, Edi Rama won a landslide victory, securing a full 83 parliamentary seats in the new Parliament that begins work in September.
With many unknown names on the lists of deputies, a significant portion of whom are inexperienced, Rama has the luxury of building his own government team without maintaining any balance within the ranks of the Socialists.
After the elections, he undertook a tour aimed at cleansing the municipalities of those he considered 'obstacles' on the path to the EU, and within a few days he managed to cleanse the local administration of administrators, deputy mayors, and directors, who silently submitted their resignations in the face of ultimatums from the Head of Government.
He then ordered the launch of an action to 'liberate public spaces', starting with Thethi, where he razed around 100 houses and buildings that were considered illegal in one week.
Meanwhile, this week Edi Rama will deal with ministers. A meeting with members of the Government, political leaders of the regions, and directors of central agencies, including Taxes and Customs, is scheduled to take place between July 24-25, where each will be given an account.
A practice followed almost every year, where ministers appear together with their staffs, with dozens of files in laptop files, comparing their work with the objectives, and in the end it is Edi Rama who makes the assessment. If we refer to many of the Prime Minister's statements, some of the heads of central agencies seem to have the fate of local officials, and in parallel with them, also the line ministers.
Unlike the last two or three years, this year's meeting could say a lot about the political careers of the current ministers, whether or not they will be in Edi Rama's plans for the new government.
The latter is expected to be known in the last 10 days of August, when it is thought that the National Assembly of the Socialist Party will convene, from where Rama will make known the names of the Government, but also the objectives. Until then, it seems that the Prime Minister, who is also the Leader of the Socialist Party, has decided to keep the current members of the Government in 'tension', creating the idea that their continuity in office will be determined by the performance they have shown. /Pamphlet/
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