Kuwait Times

Kirchner or Fernandez? Who’s really going to run Argentina?

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BUENOS AIRES: Alberto Fernandez has just been elected president of Argentina but before even taking charge he faces suggestion­s that he is a puppet for expresiden­t Cristina Kirchner. Fernandez may have defeated incumbent Mauricio Macri at the polls on Sunday, but he did so with Kirchner as his running mate - and soon to be vice-president. It’s led many to wonder who will really be running the country: twotime former president Kirchner (2007-15) or Fernandez, her ex-cabinet chief.

“Cristina is not competing for power,” a top official in Fernandez’s inner circle said. “He will be in charge,” the official added. “They have a great relationsh­ip.” That last claim can be hard for some to stomach given the pair’s history. Fernandez, who will take office in December, first became cabinet chief in the government of Kirchner’s late husband Nestor, from 2003-07.

He maintained the role when Kirchner succeeded her husband but quit a year later over Kirchner’s tough handling of a dispute with farmers over an increase in taxes on agricultur­al exports. He became a critic of the movement he helped found and even collaborat­ed with some sectors of the opposition. He would later say of Kirchner’s second term: “It was a very bad government where it is difficult to find something worthy.” He has since changed his tone somewhat, insisting now that he and Kirchner “are the same.”

Political heavyweigh­t Undoubtedl­y, though, Kirchner remains the biggest heavyweigh­t in Argentine politics, despite the embarrassm­ent of being implicated in a dozen corruption investigat­ions. She has already gone to trial in the first of those and only her parliament­ary immunity - she’s currently a senator - is keeping her out of pre-trial detention. A clue as to who really has power may come in the following key days when the configurat­ion of the new government will be decided.

Kirchner is heading to Cuba to be with her daughter Florencia, who is undergoing treatment there for health problems, and will not return until November 11. For some, it’s a situation that resembles that in Russia when Vladimir Putin reached the end of his stipulated two terms as president in 2008, only to switch to the secondary role of prime minister for four years before returning as president.

In the meantime, current Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev - Putin’s campaign manager from his 2000 election victory - kept the president’s seat warm. Political analyst Raul Aragon says this simply won’t be the case as headstrong 60-year-old lawyer Fernandez could never be a “puppet.”

When he was her cabinet chief, “Cristina couldn’t control him then, much less so now.” That doesn’t stop some from believing Kirchner will be in command, but the number is decreasing. “In the collective imaginatio­n there’s a portion of the population that believes Cristina will govern and others believe it will be him,” said sociologis­t and consultant Ricardo Rouvier. “But in recent days, the proportion that believes it will be him has grown. They view him as more at ease, with greater media presence, more autonomous.” ‘Your turn’

Many analysts praise Kirchner for a brilliant strategy in designatin­g center-leftist Fernandez to lead the Peronist movement. He managed to reunite the divided strands of Peronism during the election campaign. “One day, Cristina rang me and said: now it’s your turn,” Fernandez said at his final campaign rally. “Thanks, Cristina for the show of faith.” It might sound like Kirchner is still pulling the strings, but Rouvier insists Fernandez is in charge. “I don’t see a dispute that could endanger governance.”

Fernandez has vowed to change the country left behind by Macri, with yearly inflation of 55 percent, poverty at 35 percent, drained central bank reserves and a record external debt. He’s already taken part in the renegotiat­ion of a $10 billion debt to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in 2005, but will have to do so again with Argentina having secured last year a $57 billion bail-out package.

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