You Heard it on No Te Duermas
On the radio program, Luis D’Elía shared his current political perspective and criticized the role of the former president in the Partido Justicialista (Justicialist Party).
Tomás Modini
@ModiniTomas
At the beginning of the interview, Luis D’Elía addressed the investigation against Cristina Fernández de Kirchner: “Cristina is just another part of the lawfare plan that has resulted in 53 political prisoners. Cristina’s head in Argentina is like Lula’s in Brazil and Rafael Correa’s in Ecuador. I think today (yesterday) is a key day because we are going to see an injustice.”
“It seems like an inconsistency, a lack of respect for all the comrades who were imprisoned and paid with their freedom for such unjust persecution,” he added.
He then continued his analysis, stating: “I believe there is an agreement between Milei and Cristina to dominate the political stage. There are things happening behind the scenes that confirm this,” and that “over the last two years, with so much dialogue with the head of the Southern Command, the U.S. embassy, and the business dealings with Israel through her former interior minister, she created chaos that wouldn’t have happened under Néstor Kirchner.”
Cristina’s Role as the Main Face of the Opposition
On another note, D’Elía said: “I think Cristina’s era is over, I believe she should step aside and make room for Axel Kicillof. But not this Axel who was governor twice and couldn’t even put a deputy in power. Let him work, and let him and his colleagues do what they think is right.”
“Now, if Kicillof runs for president as Cristina’s hostage, with Mayra Mendoza as the candidate for governor, Máximo Kirchner as head of the Justicialist Party, and the lists full of La Cámpora’s young members, we’re heading towards a sixth defeat,” he fired.
He also noted: “In Peronism, shifts are permanent. Duhalde had to step aside, Menem too, and I think this is the end for Cristina. I hope she understands it,” and added, “Today, there’s a lot of discontent. Most people see Cristina as a very politically questioned figure.”
“This idea of liquidating Kirchnerism to turn this space into a total and brutal hegemony by La Cámpora has generated anger in many, including the mayors, for example,” he pointed out.
The Presence of “Big Conflicts”
Regarding the followers of the former president, he said: “Cristina’s followers should be there, but not occupying 100 percent of everything. They should occupy a space. We need to return to the Kirchnerist transversal approach that Néstor created in 2001, which then led to what it led to. I went from being Duhalde’s arch-enemy to being Néstor’s spokesperson. He understood how all this worked.”
“Kicillof said something very interesting in his last speech; he predicted that big conflicts are coming to Argentina, that they are being cooked up, but they will come to the surface in the next few days. These big conflicts will give birth to what’s coming next,” he emphasized.
To close, he shared a personal story with Néstor Kirchner: “I met Néstor on May 23, 2001, the day the Matanzazo ended. They told me he wanted to speak with me, and I didn’t know who he was, so they told me he was the governor of Santa Cruz. He told me he was going to be president and that he would change the things we were living through. I took it as a joke and thought he was arrogant, but he was right about everything he said, no doubt about it.”
He concluded by saying, “The conflict was giving birth to a new figure that we had in front of us without seeing it,” and added, “Maybe today the same thing is happening.”
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