The deputies and senators do very little to get rid of the stigma of being little representative of the desire of the people.
While the principal has to work long and hard to get his daily bread, our legislators -however- say that they can carry out political campaigns at the same time that they say they hold sessions based on the interests of the people.
This has brought queues and people’s reaction -with just reason- we are paying dearly for a very low level of representation that we have; and now they tell us that since they are in an electoral campaign it is better that the interior not move to the capital and they can carry out their interventions from a distance, often saying that they are in a place when in reality they are not there.
It is time to correspond to one of the most important crises of democracy, which is the crisis of representativeness. As long as our legislators believe that they can do what they want based on their own personal benefits, it is very unlikely that democracy will be consolidated, and the levels of criticism of the level of quality of representation will be directly proportional to the demand for claims of a authoritarian government that ends these privileges and excesses.