Castillo loses the support of his own party, which denounces a shift to the center-right

Castillo loses the support of his own party, which denounces a shift to the center-right

The president reorganized his cabinet last week, replacing his leftist prime minister Guido Bellido and other ministers by more moderate officials who were immediately backed by the opposition of the center.

The change also encouraged financial markets, who have recovered strongly. On Thursday, the Peruvian currency rose 1.38% to 3,920 soles per dollar, its fifth consecutive session on the rise and its best level since the day before Castillo took power, amid continued perception of a more measured cabinet.

The partial removal, with the entry of the moderate left lawyer and former head of Congress Mirtha Vásquez as prime minister, hinted at a shift to the center, after Castillo promised in his election campaign raise taxes on the key mining sector and draft a new Constitution.

“There is an undeniable political turn of the government and its cabinet towards the center-right, where the Cavian representatives increased, who benefit from foreign financing, business employers and the State itself,” said a statement from Peru Libre released on Twitter by the founder and party leader, Vladimir Cerrón.

Peru Libre has not gone over to the opposition, it remains on the side of the people and he is against the North American NGOs that have captured the cabinet, “Cerrón, a declared admirer of the leftist governments of Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia, later said in a tweet.

https://twitter.com/VLADIMIR_CERRON/status/1448616669585321992

His party’s breakdown is unlikely to be enough to torpedo Castillo’s new cabinet, with a fragmented Congress generally favoring a more moderate team.

During a works supervision visit in the Amazon region of San Martín, in the north of the country, Castillo appeared to respond in a speech to the statement released by Cerrón.

“We are not going to sell ourselves for pettiness, here you don’t have to go to the center, to the right, here the people rule and the people’s money has to be invested for the people,” he said. “With a tweet they think the country is changing and that’s not how it is.”

Peru Libre has 37 representatives in the unicameral Congress of 130 legislators. The right and center-right parties, led by the conglomerate of the former presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori, make up an opposition majority.

The Marxist party, which nominated Castillo as a guest to win the presidency of Peru, also announced “expulsions” and a “recomposition of its bench” in Congress, after some legislators from the group related to the president showed their support for the change in government. cabinet of ministers.

The political group said it would not give the cabinet vote of confidence “caviar”, as they call left progressives. “Failure to do so would imply a principled incoherence.”

Vásquez, the prime minister who hopes to go to Congress on October 18 in search of approval for her cabinet by constitutional mandate, regretted the announcement of the ruling party at times, she said, that stability is required to face the pandemic and economic recovery. .

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