After the event in Quilmes that marked the reappearance of Cristina Kirchner on the political scene, the President, Javier Milei, responded to her statements through his social networks and pointed out the governments in which the former president participated.
“People are starving because for decades you defended a model that was based on spending without limits and falsifying money to cover the hole,” Milei launched on X (Twitter), a channel he usually uses to respond to other politicians.
The President also added that “the result is a destroyed country with 60% poor. What is the use of what we are doing? It is useful to rebuild the country that you destroyed…VLLC…!!!”, in reference to the Cristina’s sayings in the municipality of southern Conurbano.
This message from Milei responds to Cristina’s phrase with which she accompanied the tweet, where the former vice president also stated: “60% may have voted for you, but if later people starve themselves, what good is it?”, in reference to the revalidation of the vote through management, a concept of the most important in his speech this afternoon.
The reappearance of Cristina Kirchner in Quilmes
The President was the main one targeted by Cristina at the event where a microstadium was inaugurated in Quilmes. He mainly criticized the surplus, the Base Law and also the Government’s energy policy, at which time he showed different graphs and films.
“No matter how much the president gets angry and makes faces, he does not have a stabilization plan, which the Menem government did have, such as convertibility, sustained by the sale of assets and debt. A stabilization plan is not only technical, “It’s a political question, the different actors have to believe him, this one doesn’t have it, it’s just an adjustment,” the former president said.
Cristina had only made reference to libertarian management through tweets and with an extensive letter that she published where she analyzed different aspects of the Argentine economy. Now, accompanied by Mayor Mayra Mendoza, she did it in front of the militancy and the Kirchnerist leadership.
From the words of the former vice president herself, it seems that this will not be the only event in which she appears, since in closing she assured that she would later expand her analysis on what she calls “anarcho-capitalism.” We will have to see how she begins to play on the political scene.