He Said It on “No Te Duermas”

Facundo Tignanelli
In the second part of the radio program’s segment, Facundo Tignanelli addressed the polls giving Javier Milei a high positive image and the work of Peronist governments.
Tomás Modini
@ModiniTomas
People’s Anger Over Unfinished Projects
In the second part of the conversation on “No Te Duermas,” Facundo Tignanelli discussed people’s frustration with unfinished projects: “This is happening in all provinces, not just in Buenos Aires and La Matanza. Everywhere you see those red areas indicating that the national government isn’t handling them. It’s understandable that people are upset because the projects aren’t being completed; it’s also understandable given the chaos and disarray created by the national government for the residents of the Province.”
“I think the government takes advantage of this to shift criticism towards the governor, and it’s a good strategy for the Peronism and Peronist mayors to highlight the national government’s failures,” he elaborated.
He further noted that “it seems correct and is the way to do it because when residents are coming back from work or taking their children to school, they see that sign and can quickly identify what’s going on.”
Polls and Milei’s High Positive Image
On a different topic, the deputy stated he doesn’t believe in polls: “I believe in God, in my colleagues, and in the realities I observe. I pay very little attention to polls; I think it’s a system that sets the agenda on topics but has a very narrow bias about large populations and is also conducted in a peculiar manner. They are done through landline phones and adjusted a bit for cell phones, and when they need to meet quotas, they use fewer people to reach them.”
“They build up a number that is then not reflected in reality. Now, if the symptoms they propose are based on Milei’s management, it also seems quite far from reality,” he added.
He also stated that “we live in a country with a significant portion of the population that is clearly anti-Peronist or against national and popular interests” and that “one can see it with Perón’s return, who might have had absolute support from all sectors to build new promising futures for our country, but went to an election and got 62 points.”
“There was a 38 that did not support that Perón who allied with radicals, socialists, and the entire political spectrum,” he indicated.
The State Management of Peronist Governments
Next, in analyzing the Peronist role, he said: “Also, the Peronist tenure in state management, which we Peronists understand as the instrument for the people’s happiness and the nation’s greatness, causes more sectors to support it. That’s why, if you count from Néstor Kirchner’s 2003 election to Cristina’s 2007 election, it went up to 47 points.”
“A social base expanded through proper state management. And that political model had greater validity at the polls,” he assured.
He later emphasized that “as it manages the state, Peronism increases its support base because it does it correctly,” and that “that’s why non-Peronist governments find it harder to gather votes.”
Position on Alberto Fernández.
In closing, Tignanelli was asked about the former president, to which he responded: “We have maintained a very clear position. Gender violence is intolerable in any scenario, and in this particular case, I believe it doesn’t invalidate all the work done by a political movement like Peronism in defense of women’s and minorities’ rights.”
“For someone from that movement to have such behavior, regardless of whether they are holding the highest office in the country, is indeed condemnable, but it doesn’t invalidate what others have done,” he concluded.
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