Perfil (Sabado)

The year of the jab

- by MARTÍN GAMBAROTTA

Covid has changed many things – but it can’t change everything. March 1 each year is the slated day on which the president delivers a speech to open the ordinary sessions in Congress. It was no different this year. Wait, there was a slight difference... the number of lawmakers in attendance to listen to President Alberto Fernández’s address on Monday was limited. Still, there was some heckling by opposition lawmakers including shouts directed at Vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner for, among other reasons, not wearing a face mask.

There was special anticipati­on about this specific speech by the president because only days prior to his congressio­nal address, Fernández was forced to fire his high-profile health minister over the ‘VIP vaccinatio­n’ scandal, involving, amongst others, a progovernm­ent journalist, a former president and lawmakers. The opposition called a demonstrat­ion in Plaza de Mayo last Saturday, ahead of the presidenti­al address, after news of the scandal broke. But the turnout was not impressive and opposition leaders were forced to condemn a symbolic protest with mock body bags labelled with the name of government officials and human rights activists who organisers claimed had robbed the public of the vaccines. The body bags were supposed to represent those who had died waiting for the shots instead given to government cronies, the organisers decried. But a protest is not effective if you have to explain it.

Fernández unsurprisi­ngly blasted the symbolic body bags, which were dumped outside Government House, on Twitter. The fake corpses made many opposition leaders cringe. Even former security minister Patricia Bullrich, a prominent supporter of the Plaza de Mayo protest, said she “didn’t like it.” Bullrich, a leftwing Peronist agitator in her youth, is now emerging as the leader of the confrontat­ional wing of the centre-right opposition coalition Juntos por el Cambio (JXC) that remains loyal to former president Mauricio Macri.

The JXC moderates are headed by Buenos Aires City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, a potential presidenti­al candidate in 2023 who has avoided direct confrontat­ion with the national government during the pandemic. Rodríguez Larreta insists he is not interested in intensifyi­ng the fierce political rift that has dominated Argentine politics for years. The mayor could now argue that the low turnout on Saturday and the body bags gaffe show that his moderation makes sense. The president also showed his moderate political reflexes by urging supporters of his centre-left Peronist coalition not to rally outside Congress on March 1. An anti-government potbanging protest was held on Monday night in Buenos Aires City after Fernández’s speech. These protests are not especially loud now, but they could get louder and bigger if the national government makes more fumbles. Rodríguez Larreta’s municipal government will meanwhile be tested because demand for the vaccines is growing and his administra­tion is lacking them. The City government argues it should get a bigger share of the shots because Buenos Aires has a proportion­ally larger population of senior citizens than the rest of the country.

Fernández on Monday offered a mild apology and some self-criticism over the VIP vaccinatio­n scandal to Congress. Firing his health minister, the president said, was “painful” but it had to be done after Horacio Verbitsky, the veteran pro-government journalist, admitted he jumped the line and got his shot at the Health Ministry building. Questions are also being asked about the special vaccinatio­n rights dispensed to Economy Minister Martín Guzmán and his young team of advisors. Guzmán claims that he needed the jab to travel on official business, including those upcoming talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund over the small matter of US$44 billion of debt.

The president’s speech was not all about Covid, however. Fernández drove home the message – with the five members of the Supreme Court looking on from a remote screen – that he is not satisfied with the performanc­e of the judicial branch. The president said a bicameral congressio­nal committee must assemble to monitor the court system. He also floated a proposal to establish a new “guarantees tribunal” which would take some power away from the Supreme Court.

The president’s calls for reform come after businessma­n Lázaro Báez was recently sentenced to 12 years in jail for money-laundering, having allegedly bagged giant public works contracts in Patagonia thanks to his ties to the Kirchner family. Investigat­ors could now probe if Báez’s massive fortune is somehow connected to Fernández de Kirchner, who is facing other corruption allegation­s against her in the courts.

The former president argues she is being framed with cases fabricated by conservati­ve court officials in league with Macri’s opposition coalition. The president formally called for sweeping reforms of the court system, but it’s not clear whether the ruling party has the muscle in Congress to approve the reforms. The justice minister downplayed the significan­ce of the bicameral committee, underlinin­g it will not have the power to throw out judges and prosecutor­s.

The opposition claims the president is being prodded into announcing court system reforms by Fernández de Kirchner in a bid to kill the corruption allegation­s against her currently latent in court. The vice-president on Thursday testified as a suspect accused of fraud involving dollar futures when she was in office. Again, she insisted that she is the victim of systematic fabricatio­ns for her political stances. The vice-president’s fiery testimony was carried live on television and she turned her video-call court appearance into a high-profile public defence of her record. She directly accused the judicial branch of supporting the country’s neoliberal “economic powers,” like the last military dictatorsh­ip did.

Fernández also threw some judicial punches of his own in Congress directed at the Macri administra­tion (2015-2019). The president told lawmakers that the government will press criminal charges against the former president and his officials for their management of the record Us$57-billion loan granted by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) during his presidency. The Fernández administra­tion is currently in talks with the IMF to reschedule payments for the US$44 billion the Fund has injected into the country so far (all of it during Macri’s presidency, the president refused the remaining tranches). Critics say the IMF was pushed into approving the unpreceden­ted massive loan by then-us president Donald Trump who was reportedly interested in rescuing Macri’s neoconserv­ative government for political reasons. Fernández de Kirchner said on Thursday that Macri’s management of the loan was “criminal,” while defending her own dollar futures policies.

Despite all this, it looks like vaccines and the economy will dominate this year’s midterm elections. The president on Monday announced significan­t income tax breaks for workers and vowed rhetorical­ly that utility rates will not suffer painful hikes (the catch is that they will indeed be increased). The government also needs to curb inflation, especially food prices, for its recipe to stand a chance of working after the economy dropped 10 percent in 2020. Also pending are salary negotiatio­ns. Plenty of food for thought.

The president’s speech was not all about Covid. Fernández drove home the message – with the five members of the Supreme Court looking on remotely – that he is not satisfied with the performanc­e of the judicial branch.

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