
This Monday's session highlighted the ambivalence between the DP parliamentary group, on the one hand, and Sali Berisha, on the other, in relation to justice institutions.
Regardless of what they declare in public, within the DP leadership structures there is no dilemma: Sali Berisha is no longer the 'strength' of the DP, but its main problem. The servile do not want to believe him, while the hypocrites wait for biology to extinguish the candle and profit as much as they can from what remains.
This Monday's session highlighted the ambivalence between the DP parliamentary group, on the one hand, and Sali Berisha, on the other, in relation to justice institutions.
Opposition MPs addressed 57 written questions to the head of SPAK, Altin Dumani, and 25 questions to the Prosecutor General, Olsian Çela, to the two most important people in the country's investigative institutions.
So, on paper, the DP behaves institutionally and as a party that demands accountability, while Berisha, in the same hall and outside it, attacked SPAK and the Prosecutor General with personal accusations, calling them "sleepers on crime files", caught, compromised, etc.
With this behavior, it seems that the DP treats justice as an institution that it trusts, while Berisha continues with personal accusations, treating it as such. These two approaches cannot coexist. The DP must choose whether it thinks, like Berisha, that SPAK is captured or whether it thinks that the Special Prosecution is an organ that should be held accountable through parliamentary questions and control? If the former is true, the questions are theater, while if the latter is true, then Berisha's attacks are not the DP's position, but his personal problem.
As if that weren't enough, the DP joined the votes with the SP to establish two parliamentary committees. So, it entered the procedural game. It did very well and as the opposition that it is, it must behave responsibly towards the trust of the citizens. However, while inside the hall it joined the votes with the SP, as soon as it came out to the door of the Parliament, it started again with the same rhetoric, as if it were not the one who had just joined the votes with the majority.
It is unfortunate that today the DP appears to be a party without a clear political identity, while the only visible face is that of Berisha, who, for his part, has become a huge nuisance to the opposition, as long as he does not care about its fate, but only about his own criminal woes.
Lini një Përgjigje