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Milei, furious with Massa and Rodríguez Larreta

2024-02-09T23:23:02.061Z

Highlights: In La Rosada they are convinced that the economy gives it oxygen while tightening the belt of the provinces with the drastic cut in the transfer of funds. “We have two bad guys to blame for the recession, the political caste that blocked the law and the unions,” they say. The idea most installed in Javier Milei's Cabinet at this time is to let a few days pass by “showing our teeth to the governors” and then begin to move forward.


In La Rosada they are convinced that the economy gives it oxygen while tightening the belt of the provinces with the drastic cut in the transfer of funds. “We have two bad guys to blame for the recession, the political caste that blocked the law and the unions,” they say in La Rosada.


As a result of a

mistake in its strategy,

the government goes to war.

In his fight with the “traitors” of the interior, he removed transportation subsidies, raising the minimum ticket to $1,000.

“With the law approved, the ball was left to us and they were going to demand immediate results that were unlikely to arrive,”

a member of the small table tells

Clarín .

Now the caste is responsible for what does not go the way we want.”

Karina and Javier are the most fundamentalist

.

There is no set position.

They believe in confrontation with the political caste and believe that politicians are the ones who want to continue with all their businesses.

Javier wants to go out and kill them one by one with all the jobs they have.

“We have to solve inflation first and insecurity later.

Those are our real battles.

The third is cultural.

That serves as a circus and as a distraction while we try to move forward with the others and wait for the results

,

” they say.

“If the law passed they were going to ask us for immediate results.

We have to establish that the things that do not work out are because of the caste.

The government's decision to stop sending co-participation funds to the provinces already included funds for teacher salaries that included the Nation among the 24 provinces to establish a national salary floor.

According to an analysis carried out by the Argentine Institute of Fiscal Analysis (IARAF), in January, discretionary national transfers sent to provinces and CABA fell by a real 98% year-on-year.

The Nation sent the provinces only 2% of what it sent them last year.

Tucumán, San Juan and San Luis have already announced strong spending readjustments.

Axel had to recognize that he will reduce public works in the province to a minimum and aims to “redirect” the demands of the Buenos Aires masters from La Plata to the Pizzurno Palace.

La Rosada's calculation is that

inflation will slow down and the recession will hit hard but for a short period.

In his estimates, inflation should be in single digits and the economy should rebound in the famous second semester, when the influx of dollars from the countryside begins to have an impact.

March and April will be the most difficult months

, they acknowledge.

And they are betting on not having social overflow because the most affected will be the sectors of the middle class “who do not throw stones.

If there is a social overflow it is organized, not spontaneous,” they repeat.

"The reform was not canceled, the reform just entered into an impasse," says a member of the Cabinet in dialogue with

Clarín

.

The idea most installed in Javier Milei's Cabinet at this time is to let a few days pass by “showing our teeth to the governors” and then begin to move forward with resolutions and decrees

that allow the implementation of some of the changes that were in the law and that were left behind. in the path.

In La Rosada they are convinced that the economy gives it oxygen while tightening the belt of the provinces with the drastic cut in the transfer of funds.

“We have two bad guys to blame for the recession,

the political caste that blocked the law and the unions

,

they say in La Rosada.

This communication strategy began on Tuesday night when Milei tweeted the list of supposed “traitors” with the deputies who voted against, at least, one subsection of an article of the law.

The Government used the famous trolls to add to that list two names that no one in the Cabinet mentioned.

Horacio Rodríguez Larreta and Sergio Massa were marked on some of the lists of “traitors”

that circulated on the Milei troll networks.

To support the theory that the two former presidential candidates are behind the failure of the law, they point out that the

negative votes came from the legislators of Jujuy

, where the political leader is Gerardo Morales, candidate for vice president of Larreta;

San Juan, led by Marcelo Orrego and Santa Fé, by Maximiliano Pullaro, the two leaders of Juntos aligned with the former head of the Buenos Aires Government;

Neuquén, which has Rolando Figueroa as governor, and Córdoba of Martín Llaryora and Gustavo Saenz from Salta,

three Peronist leaders close to Sergio Massa.

The Cordoba officials who arrived hand in hand with an agreement with Cordobanism - Osvaldo Giordano (ANSES), Daniel Tillard (Banco Nación), Franco Mogeta (Transport) - and Flavia Royón from Salta who stayed in the Mining area due to negotiations with Saenz

would leave the government sooner rather than later.

Milei has already informed her team from Israel that she has made the decision.

To the circle of conspirators led by Larreta and Massa in the Government, they add the governor of Entre Ríos, Rogelio Frigerio, and the legislators Nicolás Massot and Emilio Monzó.

The group is baptized with a name that they pronounce ironically in La Rosada: “The Democratic Center that guarantees the status quo and the impoverishing model,” a man from the Milei small table tells

Clarín

.

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2024-02-09

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