The presidential candidate of National Party, Álvaro Delgado, he pointed to the Wide Front for the million-dollar fine he faces Uruguay due to the closure of the flag airline Pluna and also for the lack of condemnation of the democratic situation of Venezuela, pointing out: “Everything that they have no explanation for, they don’t like us to talk about.”
Amid reproaches from the Multicolor Coalition for what happened in Pluna and the defense of the former president Jose Mujica, at the head of the government when the closure occurred, Slim He regretted that “some want to minimize” the issue.
For the official candidate, the FA carried out “a number of business adventures that have been disastrous for the Uruguay” and pointed out that “they cost the country a lot of money,” also adding what happened with Gas Sayago and the investigation into irregularities in business between Ancap and Petroecuador in 2010.
“I know that some want to minimize them and don’t like us talking about this, just as they don’t like us talking about Venezuela, because it gives them like hives,” he ironized.
The former Secretary of the Presidency mentioned the “titanic negotiation effort to reduce the fine” of this government and countered: “When one looks at the ruling of this international court of World Bank, where commercial conflicts are raised, the truth that speaks of violation of norms, international agreements, lying auctions, negligence, bad faith, bad intentions, and it scares one.”
Delgado wants to “compare efforts” in the elections
Looking ahead to elections 2024, Delgado said during a press conference in Mello that in the campaign “we are going to compare efforts with great pride” and highlighted: “Ours will have better things and some to correct, but we take care of every peso for the Uruguayans.”
The former leader maintained that “we can all make mistakes,” but warned: “The political is not above the legal, under any circumstances. “What is done badly, ends badly, and we all pay for it.”
Along the same lines, he sent a chicane to the Mayor of Montevideo, Carolina Cosse. “We are not talking about a cycle path. We are talking about a ruinous business for the Uruguay for political, legal and government malpractice,” he stated.
Source: Ambito