Perfil (Sabado)

GOVERNMENT WANTS EX-PRESIDENT AT FOREFRONT OF ELECTION CAMPAIGN

- – BY ROSARIO AYERDI

In the week in which former president Mauricio Macri has launched his new book, Primer Tiempo, the government’s election strategy is increasing­ly to single him out as its main target, an approach reinforced by opinion polls showing that voters vividly remember the economic crisis accompanyi­ng his presidency.

The government welcomes the fact that Macri is hogging the opposition scene and that the hard-line wing of the Juntos por el Cambio coalition is gaining ground. For the Alberto Fernández administra­tion, the strategy is clear – even if the ex-president is not a candidate, he must be injected into the electoral fray.

Contrastin­g the economic crisis actively remembered by the voters (according to the opinion polls) with the recovery following the pandemic collapse will be the basis for competing in these elections. But the economy will not be the only focus – all officials will have to hone in against the figure of Macri.

Fernández had anticipate­d this in his stateof-the-nation speech inaugurati­ng Congress and Vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner deepened the dispute a few days later in court. The target is the former president and his reappearan­ce, thanks to the publicatio­n of his book, will be exploited by the government.

The president announced a “criminal lawsuit” on March 1. He is seeking to identify the authors and participan­ts in the debt of US$57 billion assumed by the Cambiemos government, which Fernández described as “the most fraudulent administra­tion and the biggest embezzleme­nt of funds which our memory registers.”

Next day the vice-president said that the water was up to the government’s throat because of this debt, which was, for example, why bigger pension increases were not possible.

It was the Anti-corruption Office (OA), under the leadership of Félix Crous, which presented the criminal lawsuit against the ex-president and various officials of his government for “fraud, aggravated malfeasanc­e and embezzleme­nt of public funds,” based on reports submitted by the Central Bank and the Comptrolle­rs (Sigen) auditors. Apart from Macri, former government ministers Nicolás Dujovne (Treasury) and Luis Caputo (Finance) and former Central Bank governors Federico Sturzenegg­er and Guido Sandleris were also charged.

According to the denunciati­on, with those Internatio­nal Money Fund loans, the officials of the previous government “executed a criminal programme destined to generate huge final dollar profits for individual­s and legal entities, which were financed via the foreign debt contracted by the state.”

In the view of this government, the ex-president and his officials must render explanatio­ns for the economic crisis which they left, thus recalling and keeping fresh the numbers of his administra­tion. The income tax reform raising its floor to gross salaries of 150,000 pesos and exempting the midyear and Christmas bonuses from the levy also takes the battle to Macri. The ex-president’s 2015 campaign promise to eliminate it will be recalled but “he did not lower or eliminate it, he doubled it from 1.2 million people in 2015 to 2.4 million in 2019.” A message to the middle class which votes looking at the economy.

They also aim at other areas in this direction. The Interior Ministry under Eduardo “Wado” De Pedro is the most active in showing up difference­s. Last weekend the National Immigratio­n Department expelled John Paul Revilla Estada, convicted in 2015 for heading one of the most dangerous drug-traffickin­g organisati­ons in the country. This was a message to the Macri administra­tion which released him for deportatio­n to Peru in 2017 on the grounds that he was homesick after serving only half his term. Soon afterwards, he made a clandestin­e return to Argentina, violating the ban on his re-entry.

“If he had not been released and expelled in NA 2017, he’d still be behind bars serving his sentence in Argentina,” reported the Interior Ministry, which only a week earlier revoked a Macri-era immigratio­n decree which accelerate­d trials to the point of being sternly questioned by the United Nations.

Earlier this month, De Pedro’s portfolio decided to revoke three decrees signed by the former president permitting advance voting by Argentines abroad, convicts and federal security forces supervisin­g the elections. These norms had been establishe­d in the electoral year of 2019 by the Cambiemos government, without passing through Congress.

In the same week the ministry advanced with harsh denunciati­ons of the Macri administra­tion for crimes like illegal espionage, the lack of protection for personal data, contacts with the Chinese mafia and the sale of residency permits.

Another portfolio which is becoming a campaign protagonis­t is the Public Works Ministry, led by Gabriel Katopodis. They are not only highlighti­ng the contrast with the paralysis in that area after 2017, they are also gunning against an alleged misallocat­ion of funds since this portfolio was the first to present itself as a plaintiff in the highway tolls case investigat­ing a fraud of over US$1 billion in the renewal of the concession of the northern and western access routes to former partners of Macri.

The opinion polls come from Buenos Aires Province, whose mayors repeat to Alberto Fernández that their voters still reject the previous government. It will all work out, if the vaccines against coronaviru­s arrive, and if the “VIP vaccine” scandal passes into history.

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CRYPTO ART: JOAQUIN TEMES

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