The sector that embodies Herrerismo within the National Party He proposed to the presidential candidate Alvaro Delgado a series of measures, including economic and public safety issues.
The defeated candidate in the internal elections, Laura Raffo, He proposed, among other things, the reduction of taxes and the merger of the BROU with the Mortgage Bank of Uruguay (BHU). More controversial were the initiatives proposed by the senator Luis Alberto Heber, who proposed, for example, that living on the streets should be a crime.
The proposals were presented during the National Congress of Herrerismo, which was carried out in the Galician Center of Montevideo, where the PN formula, made up of Delgado and Valeria Ripoll.
Laura Raffo, PN.jfif
Raffo’s five economic approaches
By embodying the economic vision of Herrerismo, Raffo He showed himself in tune with his campaign proposals, by insisting on the reduction of cost of living, the drop of taxes and the debureaucratization of the State.
Between the reduction of the country’s cost and the cost of living, he called for freeing the imports of personal hygiene products and certain inputs for agriculture and industry, while asking to remove taxes on work and reduce the VAT to diesel.
On the other hand, Raffo urged the modernization of labor relations, reducing bureaucracy and a significant reduction in public spending, which includes the merger of BROU and the BHU, as well as transfer AFE into the orbit of Ministry of Transport, among other lines.
Luis Alberto Heber, senator.jfif
Heber’s safety guidelines include controversy
For his part, Heber expressed the agenda of citizen security of Herrerism and in that sense he proposed “to assist people who are homeless, but resolving the issue of coexistence.”
“People are being violent because they can’t stand people living in front of their business, doing their business. We have to go one step further. And we propose that Live on the street, “What is now a misdemeanor has become a crime, with community service penalties,” said the former Minister of the Interior.
He also pointed to deporting criminals from other countries. “Today there is a whole process that takes years to expel someone from the country. We believe that if someone comes to our country, commits a crime and is convicted, they should immediately be deported to their country of origin without the possibility of returning,” he said. Heber.
In his speech against foreign thieves, he said: “We are not willing to support people who come to commit crimes and teach crime here. I prefer to have here deported Uruguayans prisoners that sometimes have Colombians, Dominicans and Cubans.”
Source: Ambito