The leader of the "Bashkë Movement" party, Arlind Qorri, and journalist Alban Dudushi debated on "Top Story" while discussing the new penal code and new parties. Arlind Qorri: My wife is a teacher, and she tells me they forced her to become a member of the PS, they forced her to become a patronage agent. Alban Dudushi: Alright, alright, we know these stories; they are generally anecdotal. Arlind Qorri: How will we build institutions and those laws to curb this phenomenon? If we focus on the threshold, we haven't solved anything. Alban Dudushi: No, no, you're not dealing with the threshold; you're dealing with that teacher and where the vote went. I'm saying that teacher—if they tell me to kiss so-and-so and I can't stand the sight of them, I won't kiss them, brother. Do whatever you want. Arlind Qorri: Maybe you're comfortable, man of the earth; he lives on one salary and is afraid. Alban Dudushi: You work with those people who live on one salary; I believe many have come from behind you. Arlind Qorri: My duty is to give them courage and tell them to come and change the laws. Alban Dudushi: The votes you received came from those who live on one salary, not from those oligarchs and people with more money. You should have more faith in their vote. Arlind Qorri: I have faith in them, which is why I want to change the laws and institutions. Alban Dudushi: You change them, but there's a way things work. If someone comes from behind you, make the revolution, man. The thing is, this is the system we have. Fix the system, I say.