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HomeNewsMusk applauds Meloni on judicial reform

Musk applauds Meloni on judicial reform

(ANSA) – ROME, FEB 17 – Elon Musk on Monday commented with a “Bravo!” the post of an X user, Mario Nawfal, who wrote that Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni is pushing a historic reform to separate the career paths of judges and prosecutors.
In the comment shared by Musk, Nawfal wrote that “PM Giorgia Meloni is pushing a historic reform to split judges from prosecutors, arguing it will speed up trials and make the system more impartial”.
“Italy’s courts are among the slowest in Europe, with cases taking four times longer than the EU average”, claimed the X user applauded by Musk, who heads US President Donald Trump’s new government efficiency agency.
“For decades, judges and prosecutors have operated as an untouchable political force, resisting accountability”, continued the post.
In November last year, Musk wrote on his platform X that Rome judges who nixed the detention of a second batch of migrants subjected to Italy’s controversial policy of taking migrants to be processed in Albania needed to go, prompting Italian President Sergio Mattarella to say that Italy knows how to take care of itself.
The Tesla, X and SpaceX owner Musk had written via X “these judges need to go,” on a user’s post on the news of the suspension of the validation of the detention of seven migrants decided by the immigration section of the court of Rome.
Premier Giorgia Meloni, the leader of the right-wing Brothers of Italy party, and the world’s richest man have repeatedly expressed their admiration for each other.
Last month, the Lower House gave the first green light of at least four parliamentary votes necessary to approve a bill to separate the career paths of prosecutors and judges, so they can no longer switch between the two roles.
The vote was the first passage necessary for the approval of the Constitutional reform bill that also creates a high court to discipline members of the judiciary and changes the make-up of the judiciary’s self-governing body, the CSM, overhauling the way CSM justices are elected, using a draw process.
The judiciary’s union has called a strike against the reform on February 27, saying it hinders the autonomy and independence of magistrates and is aimed at bringing prosecutors under executive control. (ANSA).
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