The most obsessed have already prepared everything or will spend these hours finishing the details of the Christmas table. Hesitant people might gain momentum to send the letter to them Santa Claus with the list of gifts they really want to receive on the “magical night”. This data serves to confirm the separation between organized and unorganized. It’s not new. What is new, at least in this political mess, is that those who were used to ruthlessly imposing themselves on the opposition now have to learn to maneuver in order to survive.
After the election results last October it did Kirchnerism Will he ask Santa Claus to leave a self-help manual at the foot of the tree to learn again how to portray the eternal enemy figure of the government in power? Will the novel surprise any political analyst? Kirchnerism or the helicopter clubchoose your adventure or with an essay about The 1000 reasons for the validity of the CGT? It’s likely that the senator from Formosa would prefer to spend the summer reading Jose Mayans to learn to successfully counter your libertarian colleague Patricia Bullrichalways ready to fight and not to be intimidated by Peronism in any of its forms.
“You can’t do what you’re doing,” the flawless Mayans shouted to Bullrich Senate Working Committee as the “Piba”, as he christened her Hugo Moyanotook him by the arm and continued the process of forming the Commission to Promote Labor Reform.
Used to gossiping with the vice president Victoria Villarruel To Mileism’s chagrin, the Mayans are at a loss and don’t hide it. “They do what they want,” he complained clearly and loudly, reacting to his first defeat against Bullrich, who took him by the arm to comfort him and shouted that he should continue with the strategy of making her president of this commission.
Perhaps the Mayans’ letter to Santa Claus from this period contains a compilation of videos from those legislative days in which he imposed himself on the opposition and strictly followed the orders received from Kirchnerism.
Mayans has already rescued a phrase he had heard a thousand times on the grounds from the opposition as he tried to defend himself against their overwhelming stance: “If they start a debate like this… it goes straight to court.” Perhaps to help him internalize the era’s changing times, Bullrich paraphrased him: “You’re nervous” from Nestor Kirchner as he fought with anyone who refused to submit to his orders.