During a meeting with citizens in Vaqarr, Prime Minister Edi Rama promised a thorough “restructuring of the government,” for which he used the metaphor “selling the baking tray for scrap.” The “baking tray” here is a metaphor for the nepotism under his previous government coalition with the LSI, and suggests that he clean the government from all militants of that party.
The restructuring of the government will go parallel with a very radical reform of the administration. A reform that we have discussed during the campaign and about which I have told you that it will only be done if you give us the steering wheel, without putting anyone else on our lap. In other words, to sell the baking tray for scrap. […]
So, how will the entire state administration be reformed, from the way in which the government is structured, which needs to change, to the way in which the entire work of the deputies is structured, which needs to change, and to the way in which every mechanism, every structure, every office is structured, which needs to change.
Prime Minister Rama gave no further details on the way in which he plans to “restructure” the entire government, except that he will in “direct co-governance” with the citizens, supposedly avoiding the regular and constitutionally mandated legislative procedures.