The president of the UDI, Javier Macaya, pointed out that if someone wants to make changes to the constitutional agreement, they will most likely “put it at risk.” This arises after the doubts that some members of the ruling party have raised.
The senator told EmolTV that “the form of election, which is by senatorial constituencies, is part of the agreement, it is a substantial part, that is, if someone wants to question it, they put it at risk, that is why the call is to take care of the agreement”.
“If someone wants to make changes to it, it will most likely put them at risk. We signed an agreement that is enough for us,” he said.
In addition, he commented that “there are some extreme sectors that seek to destroy and criticize the constituent agreement.”
“We in Chile Vamos were told, for three months, that we were not going to keep our word and we showed that we fulfilled our commitment to do things well and different from the process that failed,” Macaya said.
“It is not an agreement that has imperfections, nor does it leave all sectors happy, and that is what makes this agreement virtuous,” he concluded.