Eduardo Bolsonaro and Javier Milei promise to fight against socialism, with Lula in their sights

Eduardo Bolsonaro and Javier Milei promise to fight against socialism, with Lula in their sights

The three ultra-conservative figures agreed to launch a warning call in Latin America in the face of what they consider to be the advance of socialism, a euphemism to refer to the eventual victory of the left-wing leader Lula da Silva in the October elections, something that all the polls portend. voting intention.

https://twitter.com/BolsonaroSP/status/1536125069210025984

“You have to understand that socialism is not an honest adversary, but rather it is the enemy. Not understanding that implies taking lukewarm positions that lead to greater doses of socialism until it leads to the dictatorship of the left,” said Javier Milei.

“Latin America is in danger! Long live Freedom Damn!” tweeted Pinochet José Antonio Kast, who lost the ballot last year against progressive Gabriel Boric, after winning in the first round.

https://twitter.com/joseantoniokast/status/1536156276735868934

For his part, Eduardo Bolsonaro, the main link in the relationship between his father and former US President Donald Trump and a figure in the radical wing of the Brazilian government, predicted that the two allied leaders will govern their countries.

“Now at CPAC, the largest conservative event in the world, with the future presidents of Argentina, Javier Milei, and Chile, José Antonio Kast,” he published.

During his panel at CPAC -a conference based on the one created by the ultra-conservative forces in the United States in the 1970s- economist Javier Milei took the opportunity to defend his policies with an electoral tone and criticize price controls.

Eduardo Bolsonaro and Javier Milei

“Given that food weighs a third in the index, they prohibit exports to increase domestic supply to lower the price,” he said about the limitations on meat exports. “They don’t understand that inflation has to do with the variation in prices due to the loss of value of the peso and it has nothing to do with the price level,” she added.

Regarding capital control, the presidential candidate for the space La Libertad Avanza considered that “while in parallel it makes you increase the demand for money by increasing the tax base of the inflation tax. At the same time it generates excess demand in the foreign exchange market that squanders reserves, blocks capital inflows, and implies excess supply throughout the economy. All of this results in high interest rates, less activity, less investment, fewer jobs, lower real wages, poorer, and more indigent than lead to more government spending, issuance and controls. This becomes a vicious cycle of decline.”

Source: Ambito

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