"If you have lost courtesy and modesty, you can leave the political space until you are pointed to the door," the poet Davit Maghradze wrote to the ruling party.
He talked about the controversy surrounding the parliamentary majority in the TV program "Politmeter". According to the poet, the government has moved off the road. Davit Maghradze, who was a supporter of the "Georgian Dream", suggests that if the ruling power does not listen to the public, the protest will be further aggravated.The poet appealed to the government on television and advised that if they lost their modesty, they could leave politics, otherwise the population would point to the door.
Confrontation in the ruling team continues. Several members of the "Georgian Dream" left the parliamentary majority, including Eka Beselia, Levan Gogichaishvili, Gedevan Popkhadze, Beka Natsvlishvili, Zviad Kvachantiradze.
Leaders of the "Georgian Dream" are trying to fill the place of those who have left.
The reorganization of the parliamentary majority is likely to start next week, when Eka Beselia officially declares that she is going to form a faction. After that, the "Social Democrats" will leave the parliamentary majority and will start working as a separate faction.