Perfil (Sabado)

PJ loyalist Olmos heads labour portfolio

-

New Labour Minister Raquel ‘Kelly’ Olmos admitted that Argentina faces significan­t challenges ahead on Tuesday as she began outlining her aims.

With a long career in public administra­tion, the new labour minister takes over a portfolio with a pending debt heading her to-do list: falling workers’ wages.

Olmos, who replaces the departing Claudio Moroni, said in an interview with the Metro 95.1 radio station, that the country’s big issue is “the sector of salaried workers below the poverty line” as she promised to lead a ministry that is “on the side of the workers” that “takes care of the jobs and pay.”

The new labour minister said that restoring purchasing-power to pockets amid high inflation will be an arduous task. Recent weeks have seen a number of high-profile trade union disputes over wages with further difficulti­es likely to come.

“We have to stop high inflation, ensure that it does not affect the level of employment and that the injustice that exists does not deepen, especially among the most vulnerable sectors,” said Olmos, who pointed out that “workers who receive a wage in pesos are the most affected” by price hikes.

Appointed at the express request of President Alberto Fernández, as she herself confirmed, Olmos is an economist and a long-standing member of the Justiciali­st Party (PJ) movement in the City. In the 1990s, she held a seat for City of Buenos Aires during the Carlos Menem era, and between 2007 and 2009, during Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s first term in office, she served as Municipal Affairs secretary in the Interior Ministry under Aníbal Fernández.

“On Saturday, [former head of the Buenos Aires PJ] Juan Manuel Olmos called me and told me that Alberto thought it was a possibilit­y for me to join the Cabinet, and on Sunday the president called me,” she said.

“I have a long militancy in Peronism,

I’m very close to the workers’ movement. I have many friends there,” she added.

Quizzed about her relationsh­ip with the vice-president, the minister sought to sidestep.

“I worked for four years with [late former president] Néstor [Kirchner] and three with Cristina. The vice-president is a great leader of our movement, but I haven’t had a direct relationsh­ip with her for some time,” she revealed.

“I don’t need to ask Alberto’s permission to talk to Cristina,” she said, adding: “Comrades enlisted in La Cámpora or sectors linked to Cristina have congratula­ted me, they have called me, many of them.”

BACKGROUND

Olmos’ appointmen­t to office came as something of a surprise. The 70-year-old, seen as close to Fernández and the PJ movement in the capital, was not among the names which had circulated frequently as rumours of Moroni’s departure spread.

Along with a degree in Economics (University of Buenos Aires) and a master’s degree in Urban Economics (Di Tella University), the new official holds a postgradua­te degree in Investment Project Formulatio­n and Evaluation (INPE-OAS-CEPAL).

Prior to this latest move, she served as the vice-president of the Banco de Inversión y Comercio Exterior (BICE) and as a PJ national councillor. The minister is also a senior advisor and director of the Institute of Administra­tion, Government and Economics of the National University of Tres de Febrero.

During another interview with AM 750, Olmos said she expected to have good relations with the leadership of the General Confederat­ion of Labour (CGT) trade union umbrella grouping.

“I want to work with all the comrades of the workers’ movement, as I have done all my life,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS: PERFIL CEDOC ??
PHOTOS: PERFIL CEDOC

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina