translated from Spanish: “Plop” cristina Kirchner’s reflections after Biden’s latest speech

The nation’s vice president, Cristina Kirchner, echoed this Monday the last speech by Joe Biden, the president of the United States, who is pushing a pharaonic state investment plan to emerge from the pandemic crisis. In a tweet cataract where she speaks little of local politics but draws an implicit parallelism, the vice president acknowledged the passages in the Democrat’s speech pointing against Wall Street, the low tax on the rich, and highlights her American Jobs Plan. 

Surprises gives you life. I just read Joe Biden’s speech to the US Congress, accountable for the state of the Union. I share some must-see textual ones: — Cristina Kirchner (@CFKArgentina)
May 3, 2021

Biden’s American Jobs Plan is a billion-dollar investment that will seek to generate quality jobs from an improvement in the U.S. country’s infrastructure in routes, airports, drinking water, etc. “The American Jobs Plan creates jobs that replace 100 percent of the country’s lead pipes and service lines so that all Americans can drink clean water,” Biden said. Unlike his predecessor Donald Trump, Joe Biden stressed the importance of raising taxes on the rich to fund this white house-listed plan as historic.
“I’m interested to find out how Biden plans to fund all this,” she wrote, and continued with a series of Democratic verbatim in her joint adress speech. There he talks about “reforming corporate taxes to pay their fair share” and explains that “three tenths of 1 percent of all Americans will be affected with that action.” CFK topped that tweet with the following question, a parallel with the wealth tax voted by both chambers: “Does it ring a bell?” 

I could still highlight the American Rescue Plan or the American Family Plan, but I’m interested to hear you know how Biden plans to fund all of this. Textual follows: — Cristina Kirchner (@CFKArgentina)
May 3, 2021

In the midst of a strong debate at the center of the ruling coalition on the course of economic policy, with two sectors – Albertism and Christianity – confronted by rising tariffs, the vice president sought an unthinkable ally to capture her desire for the future.

Original source in Spanish

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