The former president and candidate for leadership of the Justicialist Party, Cristina Kirchner, He criticized -without naming names- the Peronist governors, Raul Jalil (Catamarca), Osvaldo Jaldo (Tucumán), and Hugo Passalacqua (Misiones) by accusing them of “political transfuguism” for supporting Congress’s veto Javier Miley to the University Financing Law. In a harsh message, the leader of Unión por la Patria made reference because deputies who respond to those provincial leaders contributed to the libertarian strategy with support, abstentions and absences.
Through a long message on your account X titled: “The veto and the vote”, Cristina Kirchner published: “Yesterday, of the 99 deputies that make up the UxP bloc (made up mostly of Peronism, accompanied by other allied forces), 98 They complied with the mandate of the vote that led them to occupy a seat representing the people. However, the vote against the national, public and free university prevailed, and Milei’s veto against education, “It is still valid.”
Also read: The latest news from Javier Milei and the veto of the University Financing Law
Cristina Kirchner criticized: “Today the different news portals send us back the images of governors of our party who would have influenced some legislators in their provinces, to adhere to the support strategy to Milei’s veto (we value the statement of the Justicialist Party of Catamarca condemning the conduct of the representative for that province). You can also see the smiling face and the V-shaped fingers of another Peronist deputy from Misiones who did the same.”
The former president targeted the national deputy, Alberto Arrua, which responds to Passalacqua and abstained at the time of the vote. Cristina Kirchner said: “This legislator is also General Secretary of the Justicialist Party in the province of Misiones and not only was there voted university financing, but publicly promised to reject Milei’s veto. However, for some unknown alchemy, ended up being one of the 5 Peronist votes that, if he had fulfilled his mandate, would have left without effect that veto and today the university would have financing, its faculties would not be taken and the teachers and students would be in class.”
The former president said that “it was like this that these legislators, together with the PRO and some remnant of radicalism “They allowed Milei to gather the number to close the hopes of a country that knew how to recognize in education and, especially, in public universities, the path to social advancement.” Cristina Kirchner spoke of “political transfuguism” in part of Peronism, which she considered “is destroying political representations and their institutions,” and ironically: “And there are still some who wonder why Milei won…”.
In a strong message to the internal party of the PJ, Cristina Kirchner demanded to “order what was disordered”
Cristina Kirchner, who accepted the candidacy for the presidency of the PJ, sent a strong message to the party internally, in the midst of heated disputes with the governors: “This reality, which is already unconcealable, forces us today, more than ever, to straighten what was crooked y sort out what was messed up to build the best possible Peronism in an Argentina that has become impossible for the majority of our inhabitants and so that no one else in the name of Peronism ends using a bench against the People and the Nation.”