The tragic story of Patricia Bullrich’s boyfriends who disappeared during the dictatorship

During the ’70s, Patricia Bullrich He not only embraced the revolutionary ideology: he also knew love. The current candidate for president for Together for Change, she had two great relationships In those years, both members of the Basic Supply Unitwhere she began to serve in the military and where she would give her first steps as a Montonera.

At the age of 16, “Tatiana” – as Bullrich called herself at that time – was training in the Basic School to which Rodolfo Galimberti, her sister Julieta’s boyfriend and one of the leaders of Montoneros, had sent her. NEWS revealed this story in an interview with her “mentor” in that place, Mauricio Zarzuelo, who assured that she was a “guerrilla flower” and also recalled her seventies adventures with the current official.

Patricia Bullrich responded to Javier Milei after treating her as a “bomb thrower”

“El Víbora”, the nickname of Bullrich’s friend at the time, was close to her first boyfriend, Juan Manuel Puebla: “Cacho was four years older than Bullrich and was a Montonero with a career and a great guy. She was very in love.” Zarzuelo remembers.

The relationship, which began during Perón’s government, lasted more than a year, and they separated before Puebla disappeared in early 1977.

Together with him, Bullrich would take his first steps in love, and would even take him to visit the gigantic family villa in Los Toldos, where his grandmother Totó lived, although not for romantic purposes: there they happened a series of military training and shooting practices. “Patricia shot very well,” says Zarzuelo.

After Puebla, Patricia began dating the Spaniard Ernesto Fernández Vidal. “El Gallego”, who worked at the Hernández bookstore, also had a tragic end: A few months after ending his relationship with the current presidential candidate, he disappeared.

Bullrich will denounce Milei, will be “harder” with Massa and launched proposals: closing the AFI and prisoners “without cell phones”

Some time later Bullrich would marry Marcelo “Pancho” Langieri, another Montonero from Galimberti’s inner circle, who worked as a teacher and sociologist.

After returning clandestinely from exile in 1979, they had their only son Francisco Langieri Bullrich.

S.F.

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