The ex-president Jose Mujica talked about the relationship between the president Alberto Fernandez and the vice president Cristina Fernandezin Argentina, and said they should have a “steady rudder”. They don’t have to throw naphthathey have to seek and settle on a point of agreement. because otherwise they are opening the front in favor of those who are on the opposite sidewalk”said the front wing leader this Monday to hard to shut up (Radio Del Plata).
consulted by “the fight” of the Argentine president with his vice president, Mujica said that “it is bad” and “it harms them both”. Although “it does not matter that it harms them both as people”, it harms them “as a political front” and “as a matter of the future”, she opined. The former president traveled to Buenos Aires on April 2, along with his wife, former Vice President Lucía Topolansky.
Both were on the occasion of act in commemoration of the Malvinas war, 40 years. They were invited and met in the gardens of the Malvinas Museum, in the capital, with several regional political leaders. On the same day, Mujica conveyed his considerations to the president about the relationship with Cristina Fernández, whom Topolansky visited and told him the same thing.
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Mujica and Toplansky participated in the act for the Falklands War, in Buenos Aires, on April 2, 2022
“Society is in trouble and this has generated contradictions within the (Argentine) government itself. (Alberto and Cristina have) points of view that are different. It is a difficult time because more than ever they need the firm rudder and there are problems that do not seem to me to be attributable to the government. They’re a historical accumulation of circumstances that come from long before and that are hitting Argentina naturally”, added Mujica, in the Argentine radio program.
He indicated the comments to Alberto and Cristina Fernández, they told them “just like old men” and because, from Uruguay, they “are worried about looking at the river.” In addition, she joked that he visited the president, and Topolansky, the vice president, separately. “He didn’t give us the time, we had to crack,” Mujica said.
Mujica preferred to reserve what Cristina Fernández answered. “It doesn’t matter what she told her (Topolansky). (Topolansky) told him and he’s done. we had to be supportive with the Argentine people,” he said.
In addition, the former Uruguayan president referred to the trip on the occasion of the Malvinas anniversary. He said that it was a date “pleasant from the political point of view because it remembered the people who left their lives in Malvinas.” For Mujica “it is a noble cause to remember because it is say no to colonialism.
“It is not just a cause of Argentina, it is a profound Latin American cause, and of the peoples who had to endure colonialism. Time passes and we usually forget, that’s why I thought it was worth it, “he concluded.