Patricia Bullrich: "Cristina returned with a minor candidacy to provoke this political situation."

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Patricia Bullrich: "Cristina returned with a minor candidacy to provoke this political situation."

Patricia Bullrich: "Cristina returned with a minor candidacy to provoke this political situation."
Patricia Bullrich
Patricia Bullrich took aim at Cristina Kirchner and said her candidacy was a strategy to influence the current judicial and political landscape.

Security Minister Patricia Bullrich asserted thatCristina Kirchner decided to advance her candidacy as a strategy to generate tension in the political climate. In an exclusive interview, she maintained that the former president's reappearance was not accidental, but rather an attempt to influence the judicial process against her and present herself as a victim.

Bullrich was blunt: "It's not the Court's final decision that determines this climate of imminence. It's Cristina, who decides to return with a minor candidate to generate this situation." According to the official, Kirchnerism is trying to establish the idea of ​​a proscription that doesn't exist.

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In this regard, Patricia Bullrich rejected the idea that Cristina is being persecuted by the justice system. She stated that the judicial process has been going on for more than 17 years and that there is no prohibition against the former president running. "If she had wanted to, she could have run one, two, or three years ago. She chose to do so now to generate pressure," she emphasized.

He also questioned the attempt to turn a legal case into a political conflict. In his view, Cristina's return to the electoral stage was a calculated move intended to delegitimize a possible adverse court ruling.

Patricia Bullrich insisted that Kirchnerism is seeking to use the justice system as part of its political narrative. "What we are seeing is nothing more than a strategy to victimize itself and pressure the judges," she stated. She also made it clear that the judicial case must continue without interference or partisan interpretations.

"This process has been going on for 17 years . It didn't happen overnight. Cristina Kirchner knew what was coming and chose this moment. There is no proscription, there is justice," he emphasized.

Several government officials questioned the minister's remarks. Officials close to Cristina spoke of persecution and said her candidacy seeks to defend herself politically. However, Bullrich reiterated that the timing was not innocent.

In her view, the maneuver seeks to "construct a narrative of exclusion," when in reality, the former president faces a long-running legal case that is ongoing. The Court has not yet ruled, but tension already dominates the political scene. For Bullrich, Kirchnerism has once again chosen conflict as its strategy. And Cristina, with her candidacy , has once again established the confrontation between politics and justice.

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