The former mayor of Cannelloni and presidential candidate of Broad Front (FA), Yamandú Orsisuggested that the ruling party is seeking “electoral gain” from the night raids plebiscitewhich they would be taking “on horseback” as part of the campaign.
Last Saturday, at a press conference held in the department of LeapOrsi said he has “the inclination to think” that the initiative is “a kind of opportunity to gain electoral gains on the back of a campaign.”
Immediately afterwards, the former Canarian leader, who was accompanied by his running mate Carolina Cosseassured that he made this assumption on a personal level and that “it is on his own.”
“I am always interested and concerned about an isolated, one-off solution to resolve the security issue,” said the presidential candidate, adding: “This has been discussed for some time and I am not refusing to analyze it.”
In that sense, he said that “what is known is that it is not a measure that in the world, where it is applied, gives immediate results” and that he was talking with “people from Home Office” who expressed their concern about the plebiscite.
“They say ‘mommy’, then you have to go, eh,” Orsi reflected and recalled that “sometimes mistakes are made” by the National Policeand that these are even more feasible at night.
“I do not refuse to discuss it within the framework of a more global security project”
“I am not refusing to discuss it within the framework of a much more global security project, where we cannot be discussing only night raids and not getting to grips with the issue of money laundering,” he said.
Orsi also said that “the complaints for money laundering are becoming fewer and fewer,” when it is known that “the drug trafficking “It’s growing.” “Something is happening to us there and that bug is much bigger than the other one,” he concluded.
Hours earlier, in the department of ArtigasCosse had stressed her position against the plebiscite, since “it has been proven throughout the world that it does not work” and that there could be procedural errors in at least “10% of the cases.”
Source: Ambito