The state that is run by the paranoia of Edi Rama
Feb 15, 2024 1:03:39 GMT -5
Post by tomis42 on Feb 15, 2024 1:03:39 GMT -5
Edi Rama's decision, through the Supreme Court, to keep the issue of the seal of the Democratic Party still pending until the next elections, recently highlights an absurd, almost schizophrenic situation. The more the conviction is created that Edi Rama is all-powerful and politically unthreatened in the face of a battered and divided opposition, the more the repressive measures against it increase, leading to complete annihilation. This disproportion between an armored power and the frenetic attack on the opposition seems paradoxical to a sane mind. Not only Rama's propaganda tools, but also the political reality itself today in Albania, prove the superiority of the regime over any factor that could endanger it.
Everyone admits Hungary Phone Number List that in the current conditions, with the opposition divided and discriminated, with the endless means of financing, with the total control over the media, with the increasing collaboration with crime and with the open use of the new justice, the change of power by vote remains just a utopia. It is said in the political corridors that if elections are held today, Edi Rama will receive at least 90 mandates. That his fourth term cannot even be endangered by the opposition he faces, that he is calm in his reign and that at least for another decade there is no opponent who can rival him. Despite this comforting picture for the regime, the way it is dealing with the opposition creates the impression that it is under a real and permanent threat.
Normal logic would like that in the security conditions where he finds himself today, Edi Rama, at least apparently, would make some concessions. To allow the parliamentary commissions to speak, not to interfere in the division of the opposition, not to dictate justice in the process towards Sali Berisha and even, as his propagandists preach, to let him get the stamp of the DP since he is interested electorally in having him in front of him, Read also: The incinerator of Tirana, Kelliçi: Let SPAK sleep, we will track the money Beler's spokesman reveals the pact offered to him in the cell by Rama In fact, Edi Rama is doing the complete opposite. He seems feverish in his daily struggle to eliminate every fiber of opposition to his regime. This frenetic effort seems inspired more by the hypothetical paranoia of what might happen if he could one day lose power than by political logic.
Everyone admits Hungary Phone Number List that in the current conditions, with the opposition divided and discriminated, with the endless means of financing, with the total control over the media, with the increasing collaboration with crime and with the open use of the new justice, the change of power by vote remains just a utopia. It is said in the political corridors that if elections are held today, Edi Rama will receive at least 90 mandates. That his fourth term cannot even be endangered by the opposition he faces, that he is calm in his reign and that at least for another decade there is no opponent who can rival him. Despite this comforting picture for the regime, the way it is dealing with the opposition creates the impression that it is under a real and permanent threat.
Normal logic would like that in the security conditions where he finds himself today, Edi Rama, at least apparently, would make some concessions. To allow the parliamentary commissions to speak, not to interfere in the division of the opposition, not to dictate justice in the process towards Sali Berisha and even, as his propagandists preach, to let him get the stamp of the DP since he is interested electorally in having him in front of him, Read also: The incinerator of Tirana, Kelliçi: Let SPAK sleep, we will track the money Beler's spokesman reveals the pact offered to him in the cell by Rama In fact, Edi Rama is doing the complete opposite. He seems feverish in his daily struggle to eliminate every fiber of opposition to his regime. This frenetic effort seems inspired more by the hypothetical paranoia of what might happen if he could one day lose power than by political logic.