Guillermo Francos: “I was not in the parliamentary technique”

“I was not in the parliamentary technique,” ​​acknowledged the Minister of the Interior, Guillermo Francos, and stressed that the government is going to “analyze whether to continue with the treatment.” It was the reflection that the official finally made known, after having a bad time in an interview conducted by Eduardo Feinmann and Pablo Rossi in La Nación +.

In the report, the journalists asked Francos about the regulatory consequences of returning the project called Omnibus Law. In this regard, the minister tried to argue that the general approval of the law was still valid despite the government’s decision to send the project back to committee. “The treatment in particular went to committee at the proposal of our bloc. We understand that it does not make sense to generally approve a law and then reject the articles that give the instruments to the Executive,” Franco explained.

However, Feinmann told the official that article 155 says the opposite. In the same interview, the rule was read that establishes: “A project that after being sanctioned in general, or in general and partially in particular, returns to committee, when considered again by the Chamber, will be subjected to the ordinary procedure if it had not received “any sanction.” Which bothered the leader of the libertarian government.

Later, Francos declared to the media: “If the president has to resort to popular consultations, he will do it,” and assured that Javier Milei “He will use all means” to govern and warned that calling a plebiscite is not ruled out. “I feel disappointed that politics does not echo what the Argentine people voted for, that they voted for a change and politics does not validate it. This is the dispute, it seems to me. When Milei questions the political leadership, he does so for this. The president is going to advance with the elements he has and will go as far as he can constitutionally go,” the official concluded.

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