Javier Milei again generated noise with a phrase that surprised his own and strangers. In an act, the president said: “When they began to torpedo the ship A de la Rúa it was when he wanted to do the labor reform. It is not something that are torpedoing from behind are the same. They will not be able to stop the change.”

The reference to former President Fernando de la Rúa, symbol of the 2001 crisis and a government that could not finish his mandate, aroused immediate reactions. Among them, that of the journalist Roberto Navarro, who from his X account shared the video with a comment loaded with irony: “And then they accuse him of coup to one.”

Navarro’s intervention put the paradox in the foreground: Milei accuses the opposition of “torpedo” his management, but compares with a president remembered for his weakness and ineptitude to sustain himself in power. The presidential phrase, which sought to strengthen the idea that there are sectors interested in blocking reforms, ended up functioning as a boumer in the public debate.

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