After his reunion with President Alberto Fernández in the framework of YPF’s centenary, next Monday, June 20, Cristina Kirchner will reappear in public, about which there is great expectation.
This, since it will be the first public appearance of the vice president after the controversial statements of former minister Matías Kulfas, who in an off-record report pointed against Cristina Kirchner.
As confirmed by official sources, Cristina Kirchner will attend an act of trade unionists of the CTA de los Trabajadores, led by Hugo Yaskywhere the president is expected to give a speech in plenary.
The event will take place at 4:00 p.m., in the Parque de la Estación, in the Buenos Aires city of Avellaneda, an act that will coincide with the commemoration of Flag Day.
Under the slogan “June 20. The validity of Belgrano. State, market and prices: production, work and social policy in a bi-monetary Argentina”, the meeting will be attended by 1,800 CTA delegates from all over the country, as well as special guests, including them, the vice president.
It is expected that the president’s speech, about which there is great expectation, will be focused on the economic, political and social sphere and that, as always, he will give notes on the current management of the Government.
The act, in addition, was summoned by the former mayor of the aforementioned municipality of the Buenos Aires suburbs, Jorge Ferraresi, the general secretary of the workers’ union and the Minister of Territorial Development and Habitat, who will also speak before the public.
What Cristina Kirchner said in her last speech
At the YPF act, during his speech, the vice president noted: “We must focus on governing is managing these tensions in favor of the great majority”this given the political tension within the ruling party.
And he added: “Whoever wants to govern Argentina without tension or conflict, should run for the presidency of Switzerland.” And then he launched a sentence against the president: “I already said that you have the pen, now I ask you to use it”, which was the prelude to Kulfas’s controversial statements.