Jorida Tabaku has decided to send a new invitation to a political "dance" to Prime Minister Edi Rama. Perhaps still nostalgic for the spotlight during the investigative commission on incinerators, the opposition MP is desperately seeking another duel to factor her into the public eye.
But Rama is not the only one she wants to "account". On the list is the Minister of Finance, Petrit Malaj, whom she has asked to question about the two-year blockage of property revaluation, worrying that builders on the coast are paying too little tax.
But the "main course" remains the request for an interpellation with the Prime Minister. This time, the target is the Albanian Investment Corporation. Tabaku, in a tone reminiscent of great dramas, expresses concern that this institution is turning into a "questionable instrument" for the management of public assets.
"Under these conditions, there is a real risk that the Albanian Investment Corporation will turn into an instrument for the development and administration of public property through agreements with private entities without the transparency and guarantees necessary to protect the public interest, creating in practice a new form of transferring economic control over public assets," the letter says.
It is not difficult to read between the lines of her official requests. After the performance at the incinerators, where she tried to build the image of a modern "inquisitor" towards Rama, Tabaku seems to have realized that nothing keeps her alive in the media headlines more than a direct confrontation with the head of government.
While citizens are waiting for concrete solutions, MP Tabaku seems to be busy drafting questions that more resemble the scenes of a political "remake".
The question that remains is: is Tabaku really demanding transparency about properties and investments, or is she simply missing that factorizing feeling of being "in front of Rama"?






















