“Don’t point at me”: the tense exchange between Castagneto and Espert in the debate over the 2025 Budget

“Don’t point at me”: the tense exchange between Castagneto and Espert in the debate over the 2025 Budget

We close the information session“, said Espert after a long committee meeting, with the participation not only of Scioli but also of Yanina Nano Lembo, head of the National Secretariat for Children, Adolescents and Family.

However, the deputy’s decision sparked a strong reaction from the opposition, especially from those who had not yet had the opportunity to speak. “You can’t do this. You can’t be so rude and authoritarian. “I want to ask a question,” he gushed. Juan Manuel Pedriniof Union for the Homeland.

ssstwitter.com_1729642111430.mp4

For his part, Carlos Castagneto protested against the head of the commission without a microphone and asked him not to point it out. Espert quickly responded: “What are you going to do if I point you out?”

“Every time I speak you point at me. Treat me well. Nobody points me out“, Castagneto emphasized. Immediately afterwards, he approached Espert, who warned: “Don’t touch me, don’t touch me,” he said and added: “They are rude.”

Finally, Castagneto remarked: “You can’t cut off a meeting because you want“.

Once he passed this intersection, Scioli agreed and continued answering the deputies’ questions.

Daniel Scioli defended the 2025 Budget on the environment and tourism

During his speech, Scioli emphasized the promotion of off-season tourism and programs for raising international financingfor which the area will have $2.8 billion in budget allocation; the incentive for community sports and inclusion programs in the federated discipline; and what he called strategic environmental planningin addition to the work for fire management. In this last aspect, he stressed that the Native Forest Trust Fund but they were designated $16,000 million for the provinces for the same preservation purpose.

Asked about the entry of the SAD into Argentine clubs, one of the main topics on the Government’s sports agenda, the secretary responded: “In no way is it imposed that the clubs be privatizedbut rather it is about providing a corporate alternative that previously has to go through the approval of two-thirds of the clubs’ assembly in order to later analyze the incorporation of private capital for the needs that the clubs have. “I previously had another vision, but today the reality of soccer in Argentina and in the world they obviously demand to modernize the conditions for the clubs,” he added.

Source: Ambito

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts