Cristina Took Refuge in the PJ, Called the Judges of the Court "Monigotes" and Spoke of "a Foothold to the Popular Vote"
29 Articles
29 Articles
The former president waited for the ruling in the Matheu Street building surrounded by its nearest surroundings.Kicillof stayed for a few minutes and Sergio Massa arrived before the ruling of the justice system came out.The cry of the militancy and the request for a political trial to the Court that is reactivated.
“At the foothold (control) of Javier Milei’s government salary, now the ‘judicial party’ (Supreme Court of Justice) adds the seat to the popular vote,” said the former president of Argentina, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, minutes after the decision of the highest court of justice of that country that left to firm the sentence of six years in prison for the Vialidad case and that it disqualifies her to hold public office for life. Kirchner spok…
The former Argentine president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, denounced on Tuesday that the ruling of the Supreme Court that confirmed her conviction represents a "cepo to the popular vote" imposed by the concentrated economic power, in declarations made from the outskirts of the seat of the Justicialist Party after the judicial decision was known. READ ALSO Argentina mobilizes massively in defense of Cristina Kirchner before judicial decision…
The president of the Union for the Homeland bloc charged the judges who intervened in the sentencing of Cristina Kirchner and targeted Rosatti and Lorenzetti for their closeness to macrism. The post Germán Martínez targeted the judges of the Vialidad case and criticized the Court: “They handled everything” appeared first on El Intransigente.
"The decision of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation to ban the president of our Party, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, has an unprecedented level of institutional gravity. We are not facing a court ruling but a political act of an anti-democratic nature," they said.
After the ruling that upheld the six-year prison sentence and the perpetual disqualification from holding public office, the former president spoke to the militancy. She described the supremes as “monigots” of real power, warned that “the Peronists do not prostrate, we are not mafias” and urged the thousands who filled the streets to “organize themselves to be with the people who need it”
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources lean Right
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium