The mayor of Helsinki, Jan Vapaavuori (ECR), continued to be a cross-country crusade against the provincial reform agreed in the Government of his party.

In Helsinki, we will have to ask when the mayor is going to take care of his main work, the Helsinki and Helsinki people, rather than power and party politics? Where are the solutions to the problems that are felt in the everyday life of Helsinki? Housing costs in Helsinki are unreasonable, for example, for single-life. Coal burning in Helsinki continues and the Central Park and other green areas are under threat. Helsinki has a lot of long-term unemployment, queues for the doctor and other services are long and the various districts with their inhabitants threaten to be unequal. There is a shortage of reasonably priced houses, even if the rail Joker situation in my initiative is facilitated. The free-Avuori has prepared a strategy for the capital, which aims to make Helsinki the most viable city in the world. The goal is easy to agree with, but the strategy remains a paper tiger and a goal unachieved, unless people's everyday problems get solutions. The Centre is ready for cooperation, although we are not the Power party in Helsinki. Our option is the road to sustainable urban development, which is the minister of the House over time. This means, for example, cheaper housing, clean indoor air, green areas, a circular economy, more renewable energy and wood construction. Sustainable growth in the city also means that neighborhoods and neighborhoods are not allowed to inequality. People must be given more opportunities to influence and participate. Unfortunately, the voice of the ordinary Helsinki-only in Helsinki is not part of the decision-making process. The confrontation between cities and the rest of Finland is old-fashioned and damaging. Finland is such a small country that in our world we should not be divided into castes. Helsinki, other big cities, sub-cities and smaller municipalities are together in Finland. Cooperation can all win. Helsinki needs other Finnish and the rest of Finland will love its capital.

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