International ultrasound and internal resistance. Both were on the Neos agenda last week. Both landed with club chairman Yannick Shetty. In conversation with the “Kroon” he calls on his critic Dagmar Belakovich to perform and explains how the party can be brought -in -troubles.
It was a week that the young Neos Club chairman Yannick Shetty will not forget. FPö Mandaat Belakowitsch-as reported to accuse him that he had enjoyed visiting mass graves in Butsha. A sager who has created national and international indignation. “It was a deep neighborhood moved and a human border crossing. There is dismissal here,” says Shetty.
Measuring monitoring: “It can’t be strict”
But not only with the free required. As is known, the pinks also had to make a lot of conviction to agree to the Messenger monitoring, especially controversial in the liberal camp – especially Shetty itself. The criticism of the first version of the ÖVP was justified, he says. The coalition partners knew rather that Mandatars such as Nikolaus refuse Scherak because of their personal reservations and is not an unusual exercise of the free mandate for the pink.
In terms of content, successes have been used to fully revise the design. From that moment a senate of three judges is needed for each use, the software only has to check approved apps and the VFGH can not only check the law, but also the software. “It can’t be stricter,” says Shetty. And of course it is: “No extremist plans attack via fax or fixed line.”
Mechanism maintained
Critics must be pacified with the sustainability mechanism for the pension system. “From now on there is now a fixed issue path by 2030, an annual report to parliament and automatic consequences if the system threatens to get out of hand. No more votes. This is the new airbag for the budget,” says Shetty.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.