hes given you as clear a roadmap as he could as to his objectives. you just happen to not like the objectives.
i don't know of any president in any country who ever outlines clear details of their political objectives. those get worked out as bills get passed
You're trolling me, aren't you,
@sts7049 ?
When even his own ministers don't know from one day to the next what their government will do, you claim to divine a roadmap?
Try this, for example:
Homepage for the Buenos Aires Times, Argentina's only English-language newspaper. News from Argentina and beyond – in English. News, analysis, politics, finance, economy, culture, sports – and much, much more!
www.batimes.com.ar
"Having secured political support at the committee-level, after some concessions, legislative trickery occurred and allied deputies found that the terms they had agreed upon previously had suddenly been changed, apparently in a secret meeting held outside Congress that included Sturzenegger’s presence.
Forced to remove the whole fiscal chapter from the bill, which is the core of the project from a macroeconomic standpoint, the government put itself once again in crisis mode. Milei, who felt triumphant after having secured the support of Elon Musk in Davos,
had pulled the rug out from under his negotiators’ feet."
You don't like that? Here's some more:
The government must be considered the chief architect of the self-destruction of its megalomaniac omnibus bill.
batimes.com.ar
"If not quite snatching defeat out of the jaws of victory, the government must be considered the chief architect of the self-destruction of this always megalomaniac bill without monopolizing the blame".
and this, of course, the dollarization crap:
After making it the centrepiece of his presidential campaign, the now President Javier Milei began pushing dollarisation down his list of priorities.
www.batimes.com.ar
So, is it? Isn't it? But calling governors "traitors", even those of Mendoza and Cordoba who could be sympathetic to his aims, will solve everything, of course:
President Javier Milei is evaluating the possibility of calling a non-binding plebiscite to pass his reforms in the hope of a new Congress breakdown after the 2025 midterms.
batimes.com.ar
except bad drafting on the part of the "government" decimated the package anyway. Not that Milei or anyone else in power would acknowledge that, instead we have our toddler president asking to have his mobile phone taken away:
“Traitors” and “criminals” are just some of the words Javier Milei used to refer his critics and members of the opposition on social media this week.
batimes.com.ar
Come on,
@sts7049, you can do better than that I think. It has nothing to do with what I want, as I said in my post, Argentina need governability, even if I don't share the values and beliefs of this nutcase. It would be quite amazing if a government of national unity (Scioli-Macri-Milei) emerged out of this chaos, and possibly not bad for Argentina, despite your sacred cow Milei.