Antonio Farinaro will be a candidate for mayor in the administrative elections of Aversa. Rumors of a possible withdrawal from the electoral competition are categorically denied by political circles close to the former president of the city council. Before making public appearances, the esteemed lawyer has decided to wait for the local scenario to be defined. A tactical choice, in short. The political framework is still fluid. And it is not excluded that Farinaro’s coalition could open up to the contribution of other civic forces. At the moment the group is made up of Forza Aversa, Noi per l’Italia, Prima Aversa, Noi Moderati and Per Aversa-Farinaro mayor. The work for the formation of the lists is already well underway. Between the end of this week and the beginning of next week, the coalition will be officially presented and the electoral campaign will begin. In this period of time, “joints” will be taken into consideration with political exponents still undecided about their location. Meanwhile, the position of We Moderates seems definitively clarified. The provincial, regional and national leaders did not raise the political problem of the presence of Forza Italia on the other side in support of Franco Matacena. Furthermore, the Azzurri should run without a party symbol. Maurizio Lupi’s followers will therefore be alongside Farinaro. After all, they have been his staunchest supporters from the beginning. Just read the statements of the Caserta leader Angelo Lettera on Italia Notizie. Final clarification which is also a warning for our readers. In the formation of coalitions, this applies to everyone, we are witnessing “things that you humans can’t even imagine”. Prominent exponents who today say “yes”, tomorrow “no”, the day after tomorrow “I don’t know”. Everything and the opposite of everything, in short. A political and personal decay that should be the subject of reflection by everyone. Ergo, at the time of writing Antonio Farinaro is running for mayor. If in a minute someone performs sensational pirouettes, it’s not our fault. It’s inconsistency, but they call it politics.
Mario De Michele