Post by account_disabled on Mar 4, 2024 2:33:24 GMT -5
These points are however provisional. In this context, a few days after the announcement of the pre-agreement state Rep. Maximo Kirchner, son of former President Cristina Fernández, announced in an open letter that he does not support the agreement. He was highly critical of Secretary Guzman's administration and said he felt excluded from President Fernández's decision-making system. Despite this he resigned as chairman of the Todo Front legislative group in the House of Representatives. To call the reaction explosive would be an understatement.
Despite measures to de- following his resignation, Fernandez said he would not ask officials close to Maximo Kirchner to resign and announced that his organization La Campora would not leave the government but rifts remained. It seems more profound today than ever. Kirchnerist political leaders and opinion leaders critical of the deal UK Mobile Database with the International Monetary Fund have called for the debt to be condemned and appealed to a court in The Hague and will split in a formal vote in parliament. Yet the cracks are not new. Vice-President Cristina Fernandez has repeatedly expressed her differences with the government. Ministers in her department publicly offered to resign from cabinet posts in October after losing primary elections but were not accepted.
At the time, she herself said in an open letter that Alberto Fernandez lacked the determination, will, and management speed to confront the capital sector. . Although the letters were published on a virtual platform, the centrality of the epistolary genre in Argentine politics is actually nineteenth-century. But it is worth noting that these two departments of internal conflict are not equivalent. Kirchnerism is a compact collective with a unique and clear leadership of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. On the other hand what can be called the department of Alberta is more like a group of singular actors and their distrust of the former president’s leadership style is not new. Members of the Buenos Aires province's governor-mayor union are united by the Evita movement of the General Confederation of Labor and Peronist figures from the city of Buenos Aires, such as Gusta, who have been close to the president for decades.
Despite measures to de- following his resignation, Fernandez said he would not ask officials close to Maximo Kirchner to resign and announced that his organization La Campora would not leave the government but rifts remained. It seems more profound today than ever. Kirchnerist political leaders and opinion leaders critical of the deal UK Mobile Database with the International Monetary Fund have called for the debt to be condemned and appealed to a court in The Hague and will split in a formal vote in parliament. Yet the cracks are not new. Vice-President Cristina Fernandez has repeatedly expressed her differences with the government. Ministers in her department publicly offered to resign from cabinet posts in October after losing primary elections but were not accepted.
At the time, she herself said in an open letter that Alberto Fernandez lacked the determination, will, and management speed to confront the capital sector. . Although the letters were published on a virtual platform, the centrality of the epistolary genre in Argentine politics is actually nineteenth-century. But it is worth noting that these two departments of internal conflict are not equivalent. Kirchnerism is a compact collective with a unique and clear leadership of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. On the other hand what can be called the department of Alberta is more like a group of singular actors and their distrust of the former president’s leadership style is not new. Members of the Buenos Aires province's governor-mayor union are united by the Evita movement of the General Confederation of Labor and Peronist figures from the city of Buenos Aires, such as Gusta, who have been close to the president for decades.