The sudden death of Peronist Néstor Kirchner finished with the family dream continue to alternate in the Casa Rosada with his wife and successor in the Presidency of the Republic, Cristina Fernandez, who is leaving office in December 2011.
"We are absolutely determined to rule the country until 2011, from 2011 to 2015 and 2020!" Had excited Kirchner during a meeting last March, before thousands of supporters.
That plan of the dynasty began in 2007 when Kirchner completed its mandate and enthusiastic about his high popularity, the incumbent party candidate elected to his wife, who had not previously held executive positions, only legislation.
then lifted up by her husband, Cristina Fernandez was elected as overwhelming. Garnered 44.8% of votes and surpassed by more than 22 points in the second, Elisa Carrio, who collected 22.9% of votes.
matrimonial dispute for power
In recent months, the so-called 'presidential marriage' came flirting with the idea that both Nestor and Cristina, regardless, there may be candidates for 2011 general elections.
"Why not penguin penguin?", Challenged the president a month ago, which triggered versions of alleged fights in the bedroom of power over which of them would eventually be the next 'presidential'.
Though many bet that would finally impose strong and dominant character of the personalist Kirchner. And remember that he was the 'strong man' in politics, to the point that they called him 'President in the shadows. "
All this is gone. Fernandez now faces the solitude of power and the specter of being 'widow', a stigma that in 1974 also reached the then Vice President Maria Estela Martinez at the death of her husband and President, the charismatic leader Juan Peron.
'Chavela', as they called, had to assume the presidency and made a disastrous government, which eventually toppled in 1976 by the armed forces through a coup. Today he lives alone and forgotten in a villa on the outskirts of Madrid.
Luckily for Argentina and its citizens, Cristina Fernández far exceeds in talent, training and capacity to the woman, just a former cabaret dancer, who buried the dream of the first dynasty Peronist presidential ticket Peron Peron Juan Ignacio Irigaray
in San José mine in northern Chile, warned of the danger three hours before the landslide that buried them and company executives would not let them out. conditions and risk were a thing known, but these gentlemen acted as if it rained This was stated on Tuesday, the deputy Chilean Carlos Vilches, a member of the Commission investigating the accident in the Chilean Parliament, adding that some of the rescue workers are willing to ratify these words in this instance the legislature. Vilches Juan Illanes said one of those rescued, told him that in the hours before the collapse, the 5th of August, workers warned that the cracks Rocky in San José mine were stronger than usual and asked to return to the surface, which was denied by the manager of farm operations, Carlos Pinilla.
"I said (Illanes) that at 11.00 am started to feel loud noises. They called out and denied the permit. They (the miners) think that there was negligence of the owners and managers," said the deputy. "The conditions and the risk was known thing, but these gentlemen acted as if it rained. It was reasonable to take them," said Vilches, who also confirmed that several have already agreed to give evidence.
The mine was playing and left us in Version Illana was confirmed by his teammates Jimmy Sanchez and Omar Reygadas. "The mine was ringing and they let us in, but I can not talk more about it," Sanchez said when asked about it by reporters.
"I was in a magazine, when it happened. Then I heard about the call. It must have been the shift manager (Luis Urzua) or the foreman (Florencio Avalos). One of them contacted Pinilla. He knew what happened in the mine, so I can not deny it. For several days he was cracking. I come before the investigative commission. It is my duty, "he said on his part Reygadas. Cristián Barra, adviser Ministry of Interior, who was in the mine during the rescue, also agreed that there were signs that foreshadowed the collapse. "The opinion of experts from Codelco is that this did not happen from one minute to another, but necessarily there were signs that a collapse could happen," Barra said the daily La Tercera.
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