The senator from Encuentro Nacional, Kattya González, questions the children of politicians hired without a competition in Congress, considering that she did the same in the past when she entered the Upper House as an advisor without a competition and without the need to join the Colorado Party, just as she currently ironizes about the need to be affiliated to get her “first job.”
Firmly, the legislator Kattya Gonzalez He is making his indignation known to the four winds over the hiring of several congressmen’s children in the Legislative Branch. True to his style, he even made a show for the press, putting on a red scarf, alluding to the Colorado Party, and making fun of the supposed obligation to join in order to get one’s first job.
LIE KATTYA!!!
In 2004/2005, when “Magister/Doctora Veloz” was hired WITHOUT A COMPETITION in the Senate, she did not need to join the Colorado Party. Nor did she need to when she was hired in CUSTOMS.
“Pigs talking about hygiene.”
PS: Ignore the “pedal tractor”… pic.twitter.com/LJ6EdWfnVF— Anibal Coronel (@ANIBALCORO) December 28, 2023
What the parliamentarian avoids remembering is that she too She was an advisor to the Senate for 2 years And, although at that time his father was not yet a senator, he already enjoyed a lot of influence in the legislative sphere.
Thus, without a competition, on April 12, 2004, the then president of the Senate, Carlos Mateo Balmelli, hired the lawyer Kattya González for three months, as an advisor attached to the Presidency of the Upper House, with a salary of G. 2 million per month.
On January 19, 2005, the President of the Senate, Miguel Carrizosa, also hired her for six months to continue being an advisor to the Presidency of the Upper House, with a monthly salary of G. 2,500,000.
At that time, the then lawyer – daughter of politician Marcial González Safstrand – did not need to join the Colorado Party to get the position in public office, she would have needed only her father’s contacts.
Another of Gonzalez’s antecedents is her contract as legal advisor at Customs, according to information published in the press.
Incoherently, what he did in the past, he now questions.
Read more: Kattya González was an advisor to Congress in the past