Thousands of Argentines protest against controversial cuts Javier Milei in front of the headquarters of Power of attorney. They do not support the controversial Decree of Necessity and Urgency approved last week, nor does the ‘Law of Bases and Starting Points for Freedom’known as Omnibus Law and presented a few hours ago.
It establishes that Milei will be able to modify economic, political and social aspects without going through Parliament until the end of his mandate in 2027, which would give him a greater concentration of power. The measure contemplates a reform of the electoral systemharming minorities and eliminating the mandatory nature of party primaries.
Set a tightening of the penal code against those who call three or more protesters to the streets, increasing the penalty to up to six years in prison. Because since he came to office, Milei has made it clear with his particular “he who cuts, does not get paid.” Words that she shares with her Minister of the Interior, Patricia Bullrich. “If they break something, they pay for it,” stated the owner. Although they have not always been so united.
“Throwing bombs is wrong, right?” Milei asked during the campaign, linking Bullrich with terrorist activities during the 1970s and who in the electoral debate asked if she wanted “this to be a dictatorship,” in relation to whether would approve a Decree of Necessity and Urgency that he, paradoxically, has just approved.
The new law also delves into the privatization of 40 companies, implements pension cuts and establish a tax increase 15% to farmers. Controversial modifications that would also allow the entry of foreign military to Argentine soil for, they say, instructional activities.
Source: Lasexta

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