VIDEO: Guillermo Moreno’s cumbia in campaign

“Do you want the doctrine of peron? the one of Evita and Peron. Or do you prefer radicals, my sweetheart? No. I prefer Perón. To Guillermo and Perón, but now there is no such thing, darling…”, is the beginning of the song of the new campaign spot for Guillermo Moreno. The former Secretary of Commerce launched his candidacy for president with a video reversing the tropical theme “Cholesterol”.

In a message with a certain degree of humor and relentless darts aimed at the president’s management Alberto Fernandez, Guillermo Moreno came out to pre-candidate for the national elections. “What is it, sweetheart? He has always been a big eater and with Alberto he goes hungry, my fatty. No! What happens is that Alberto declared that he no longer believes in Perón. And Albertito’s pressure will rise if they talk to him about Perón. It’s just that he was always a radical, he’s Albertito. He wants hyperinflation ”, the song continues in the rhythm of coastal cumbia.

“The political project of the front of all. When a president decides not to re-elect it is the end. It already happens to be an anecdote as we are going to be next week. It is not a Peronist government because it starves the people. I said it the day Cristina Kirchner elected him. It was going to fail and today was the day the wall fell,” the Peronist leader said on FM Delta, referring to Alberto Fernández and the resignation of the reelection project.

In that aspect, Guillermo Moreno bet on his candidacy by recalling the justicialist party insignia. Undermining the progressive and social democratic positions, which still exist in the official coalition, the former Secretary of Commerce prevails with a look focused on Peronist orthodoxy, from the political as well as the economic, with his own political group.

It is not the first time that the economist spreads his ideas to the rhythm of cumbia and the tropical sound. At the time, he used a popular song by the palm trees to position itself as a legislative political option. The band from Santa Fe spoke out against the use of one of their songs, to which they changed the lyrics “without the author’s consent,” as they explained.

In fact, they started the claim before SADAIC. “We learned that the song ‘The friends that I have’, with original lyrics by Carlos Cerilla and music by José Luis Nanni, that in due course the group would record the palm treesis being used to launch the candidacy for National Deputy, on behalf of the province of Buenos Aires, for the Party Principle and Valuesby Guillermo Moreno,” the Santa Fe musical group wrote in a statement.

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