After confirming Bullrich, La Libertad Avanza warned Macri: “He didn’t buy shares in the government”

In the midst of the definitions about the future Cabinet of Javier Milei, the designated Minister of the Interior, Guillermo Francos, came out at the crossroads of the alleged discomfort that the latest movements of the libertarian, which include the appointment of Patricia Bullrich as head of the Ministry of Security, would have caused in a sector of the PRO. I don’t want to stir up a new controversy. To me, it seemed like a valuable attitude (the support of a sector of the PRO) and with political clarity at the time, but that does not mean that they bought shares or that we are distributing government shares. We are taking a lot of valuable people from Juntos por el Cambio and other political sectors,” Francos said about the support of the opposition space, in the midst of new appointments in the team that will take office on December 10. Interviewed by Radio Rivadavia, Francos denied that the support made explicit by Macri and Bullrich has distorted the course of the election. “There’s no way to prove it,” he said. And he pointed out that within the PRO itself “they said ‘the people voted for a change and if they voted for a change, we are going to accompany it.'” “That is to say,” said the owner of LLA, “that the people would have accompanied us anyway because they voted for a change.” Francos’ statements are part of the internal struggle that was unleashed in the PRO by the now distant decision of Bullrich and Macri to support Milei in the runoff, and which was accentuated with the possibility that the former presidential candidate would land in the libertarian Cabinet, something that was confirmed this Friday. On the other hand, the former head of Banco Provincia said that they are trying to gather consensus in a Congress that, even with allies, will find the future ruling party in a situation that will force it to reach agreements with other political forces. In this sense, Francos warned that the rest of the benches should take into account the support that the libertarian proposals garnered at the polls. You can’t say no to a President who was elected with a clear speech of what he was going to do. If they understood that the laws we presented do not represent what we promised in the campaign, they would have every right not to go along. But we are going to do what was said in the campaign and was supported by 56% of Argentines,” he said.

Original source in Spanish

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