Cristian Ritondo pointed at Rodrigo de Loredo and criticized the UCR: “They do not have partisan conduct”

Cristian Ritondo pointed at Rodrigo de Loredo and criticized the UCR: “They do not have partisan conduct”

September 11, 2024 – 16:08

The head of the PRO bloc took the floor after his UCR counterpart and asked him to “take responsibility for what they voted for.”

The head of the bloc of deputies of the PRO, Christian Ritondohe teased his peer Radical Civic Union (UCR), Rodrigo de Loredopointing out that his party “has no partisan conduct“, referring to the internal conflict that is taking place within the said front, while the presidential veto was being debated in the lower house.

The former Minister of Security of the Province of Buenos Aires took the floor in the chamber and stated: “What I want to say to the person who spoke before my turn to speak (De Loredo) is that I would have voted differently if that’s what I wanted. He would not have become a partner with Kirchnerism and would have voted with us on our opinion. Because It’s easy to blame everyone, from social media to journalism.. You have to take responsibility for what you voted forwhat they arranged and with whom they arranged it.”

Ritondo chicana De Loredo deputies veto pension reform

Ritondo’s chicanery to De Loredo.

This caused the voices to rise in the room, with cries crossing over, to which the president of the PRO bench pointed out: “Learn from the education that radicalism always had“, and then he ironically says: “Since he has no partisan conduct.”

Cristian Ritondo explained his support for Javier Milei’s veto of retirement mobility

After asking for silence, Ritondo explained his support for President Javier Milei’s veto of retirement mobility: “We believe that the change in Argentina is fiscally responsible. Let each law state where the funds will come from. “It is very easy to pass laws this way.”

He also pointed out those legislators who voted in favor: “We have to take responsibility for what we voted for. Are we Argentines up to this? No, because all Argentines pay for it. We are not going to do it for a nonsense. They wanted to make populism, finance with debt and issuance. And more issuance means more poverty.”

Finally, Ritondo insisted: “If you want to vote, you can, but There are those responsible for the fact that retirees have lost purchasing power. Milei governed for 9 months, but Alberto governed for 4 years. They should take responsibility, and so should those who accompany them.”

Source: Ambito

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