Confession. Pedro Francke, former head of the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF) in the Government of the President of the Republic, peter castleadmitted that he felt “hurt” when he left office in the ministerial cabinet.
“Yes, I left very hurt (from the Government of Pedro Castillo) because I had a lot of faith in the current Government. I generated an empathy, peter castle he was able to win my heart by saying it in some way”, he declared during an interview on Canal N last Friday.
Nevertheless, Francke did not want to answer about a possible resignation of Pedro Castillo. In this regard, he mentioned that someone who assumed “an important position” in the current administration of Castle Lumps “he must have some caution”, since he also had some responsibility. “Secondly, I am not giving my opinion for a personal matter (…) My own personal feelings are not influencing the issue”, he asserted.
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at another time, Pedro Francke said that, before being sworn in as Economy Minister on July 30, agreed to “some conditions”, one of them being that Guido Bellido, former head of the PCM, said “explicitly and publicly” that he supported the economic policy he was going to carry out. “He did it in a tweet, but his word is not something to have too much faith in,” he added.
Francke remained in office for 185 daysyes; he decided to resign as economy minister after the departure of Mirtha Vasquez in the PCM, after disagreements with Pedro Castillo, who is currently being investigated in the Prosecutor’s Office for him Tarata III Bridge case.
“Unfortunately, things didn’t go the way you wanted (…) The drop that overflowed the glass was with the Avelino Guillen“, he pointed.
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Previously, Pedro Francke said he felt “disappointed” in the Government of Pedro Castillo after not feeling supported by the head of state for the economic reforms proposed in the MEF.
“At the moment of uncertainty, one has to make decisions with the doubts that exist and I feel that what was done had to be done. I feel disappointed? Yes, I expected something else from this Government; And does that have costs? Yes, it has a political cost”, he expressed in an interview with Hildebrandt in his thirteen.