Base Law: “Topito”, “Banelco” and spicy cross between Wado De Pedro and Villarruel | Notes from a hot session

Base Law: “Topito”, “Banelco” and spicy cross between Wado De Pedro and Villarruel | Notes from a hot session
Base Law: “Topito”, “Banelco” and spicy cross between Wado De Pedro and Villarruel | Notes from a hot session

I cut it

The repression of federal forces had been unleashed with fury against the demonstrators protesting outside Congress. Senator José Mayans (UxP) asked to suspend the session until he saw what happened with the repression, but the Puntano libertarian Bartolomé Abdala, who chaired the debate, sought to avoid it with the promise of going out to verify what was happening. The repression intensified and Anabel Fernández Sagasti (UxP) reminded Abdala of his promise, Eduardo “Wado” de Pedro (UxP) moved to form a commission to see what was happening and the radicals Eduardo Vischi and Maximiliano Abad supported the proposal. Vice President Victoria Villarruel quickly returned to the presidential chair to regain control of the session that had gotten out of hand for the San Luis and she then had a tough confrontation with De Pedro.

“There is a motion of order, President, from Senator Vischi: that two senators from each block can constitute a commission to talk with the authorities to try to stop the repression,” said Wado de Pedro and Villarruel replied.

–Senator De Pedro, he said, that motion of order does not exist, if anyone wants to leave to check the situation they can do so calmly.

Despite Villarruel’s interruptions, the senator and son of the disappeared continued:

“I know that you demand a different regime,” he said.

She interrupted him. “Senator, don’t get me into her personal story,” she said. “I’m sorry, you are the vice president of the Nation of a democratic and republican system,” De Pedro replied and Villarruel, who claims state terrorism, cut off her microphone.

Banelco international

Upon entering the venue, Riojan senator Florencia López was confused by a reporter with her Neuquén counterpart Lucila Crexell and the Riojan – she dragged the r – to give her name and repair the mistake. Inside the venue, Florencia López referred to the senator suspected of negotiating her appointment as ambassador to UNESCO (Paris, France) in exchange for her vote in favor of the Government. “I hope that the senator who has been included in this documentation (from the Foreign Ministry with her list) abstains from voting because her will is flawed,” Lopez launched. Crexell reacted from her bench and the woman from La Rioja replied: “Don’t interrupt me, she will answer when she is summoned to court if she has nothing to hide.” Then, she compared the situation with the bribery scandal in the Senate during the Government of Fernando de la Rúa: “Things were also offered to the senators. In the Banelco Law it was cash. Today it seems that they are embassies, of places, of works for the provinces,” she stated.

“Mentally ill”

Fuegian senator Cristina López attacked President Milei and his own statements, and considered that “he would have to resign now or we should be seriously thinking about an impeachment trial.” “The influential President we have believes he is apocalyptic and, among other atrocities, a mole, he loves to be a mole who hates the State and says publicly that he is going to destroy it from within. A little mole that insults and mistreats to every politician and citizen who thinks differently. It is obvious that he is not qualified in political terms to continue being head of state.“, He launched. “We need to urgently work on a bill to protect the Argentine people from future presidents like Milei, who I consider to be mentally ill,” López proposed and clarified: “By definition, a mentally ill person is called someone who has a mental disorder. “the health that affects people’s mood, thinking and behavior.”

Traitor

The Fuegian radical Pablo Blanco vindicated his efforts to remove Aerolíneas from the list of privatizations and went to the crossroads of the “network groups” that branded him a “traitor” for announcing that he will support the Bases Law: “I am not a traitor because I have a different opinion than the senator from Río Negro, I do not sell the Homeland. I have received a lot of criticism. But I tell the inhabitants of Tierra del Fuego that they will continue to have Airlines, we managed to get it removed from the articles of the law because this person from Fuegian. They call him a traitor, he insisted on that,” argued Blanco.

Eccentric

The radical dialogueist from Catamarca Flavio Fama complained because the Government “does not allow itself to be helped” with a particular request: “The Government finds it difficult to listen because it believes that it is a sign of weakness and it is quite the opposite. It is very fun to win an election and it is much more difficult to manage. To manage you have to roll up your sleeves, have humility, sit down and talk. Giving in is not weakness, it is intelligence. We must abandon eccentricities and “We must begin to deepen our humility.”

Terminator

The delegation of powers to Milei was one of the most criticized proposals on campus since UxP. “Delegation of powers to a President who says that he is a mole, that he comes from an apocalyptic future to destroy the State,” said Sergio Leavy from Salta. “I would be ashamed to return to La Rioja and say that I gave my powers to the Terminator,” said Florencia López, from Rioja, ironically. Marcelo Lewandowski from Santa Fe pointed out his destructive character to justify his vote against him: “I would love to give him effective tools, but since he is governing it is necessary to give him mass and an iron cutter.”

“Don’t break everything”

“They did not vote for them to leave more than 6,000 public works in half: sewers, pipes, routes, schools. That’s why they voted for them so that it could be seen, so that they could see that the State was changing their lives,” Tagliaferri added to the ruling party. . And she concluded: “The people elected them to govern, not with the hope that they will break everything. Should education be improved? Yes, should it be broken? No,” criticized the PRO senator from Buenos Aires, Guadalupe Tagliaferri.

 
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