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Fernanda Raverta: between Alberto Fernández and Máximo Kirchner, from a nursery school in Havana to ANSeS

2020-04-30T19:44:25.665Z


The leader, who was a deputy and minister, joins the national cabinet. His militant and family history, between his murdered mother and his businessman father, former Firmenich's trusted man.


Pablo Ibáñez

04/30/2020 - 16:07

  • Clarín.com
  • Politics

Everything that is Maximum is Cristina but not everything that is Cristina is Maximum . The opinion of a historian from La Cámpora serves to explain the DNA and terminals of Fernanda Raverta, the leader that Alberto Fernández appointed at the top of ANSeS.

Raverta is, with that logic, pure Maximum and reports, later and by that means, to the former president. It was, chronologically behind Mayra Mendoza - the lady who first sat at the small camper table - who became Kirchner Jr.'s shadow when he left the remote headquarters that he exerted from Santa Cruz and moved to Congress. And to Congress.

It was a traumatic process: for the defeat of 2015 but, also, because in the first months of the Macri era there was the noisy breakup of José Ottavis, who was the boss of Raverta in the camouflage organization chart.

In addition to being "guide" of Máximo, in the National Congress Raverta wove an empathy with Axel Kicillof - who in 2015 assumed as a deputy for CABA - and that four years later, after supporting her in the unsuccessful intention of being mayor of Mar del Plata, turned her into Minister of Social Development.

His electoral adventure in Mar del Plata ended badly due to tactical errors and a blindness in the armed forces. Raverta lost to the macrista Guillermo Montenegro despite the Fernández national wave and the positive traction of Kicillof in the province.

Fernanda Raverta passed from the province community ministry to ANSES. Photo M. Nievas

Last December, Kicillof - a Christian who is not mediated by Máximo - transmitted that Raverta's entry into his cabinet was due to personal relationship and appreciation. A way of saying, without saying it, that he did not give La Cámpora a ministry.

If that gray zone, almost imperceptible, existed, it evaporated with the arrival of Andrés "Cuervo" Larroque to that position, general secretary of La Cámpora, and political aide-de-camp to Máximo.

Political arithmetic: Vanoli, a wild Christianist, leaves and two campers enter. Who adds up? Maxim Kirchner.

But Raverta has been a member of La Cámpora for a long time before it sprouts. His personal history was crossed, since he was born in November 1976, by politics.

Her mother, Inés Raverta, known as "Juliana", was a Montoneros activist tortured and assassinated in Lima, Peru in 1980, as part of the criminal action of the Condor plan. 

His father is Mario Montoto, ex-private secretary of Mario Firmenich, the last montonero boss. The leader was away, for years, with whom she became an entrepreneur in the security and defense field.

Although he recovered the link with Montoto, unlike his sister Ana, he did not use his father's last name.

At the time of her mother's crime, Raverta was with her sister and other children of montonero militants in Havana. This story is narrated by Analía Argento in "La Guardería Montonera: Life in Cuba of the Children of the Counteroffensive".

Years later he returned to the country with Adela Segarra - by then a couple from Montoto -, with whom he settled for a time in Mar del Plata and then lived almost a decade in La Matanza. He returned, adolescent, to the coastal city.

Segarra met Cristina Kirchner in 2004 at the reopening of the former ESMA and later became a deputy. Adela was part, at the time, of the Evita movement of Emilio Pérsico, which was, in turn, Raverta's last political identity before joining La Cámpora.

Graduated in Social Work, with territorial militancy, Raverta assumed as a Buenos Aires deputy in 2011 and in 2015 she passed the National Congress.

Due to her training and her work in the territories, Kicillof placed her in Social Development and, now, Alberto Fernández puts her in charge of ANSeS, a key structure in the distribution of assistance in times of pandemic.

Vanoli, they say in Casa Rosada, seemed the right man to design financial structures and administer the FGS (Sustainability Guarantee Fund) but not for the deployment in the trench that the coronavirus crisis requires. Vanoli scattered behind the scenes with La Cámpora, who in addition to number two, Santiago Fraschina, placed numerous officials in the body.

Among them, Pablo Obeid, head of one of the ANSeS regional offices in Buenos Aires, from Mar del Plata, a graduate in History, and a partner of Raverta, who is now their boss.

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2020-04-30

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