Congress Will Seek to Reverse Javier Milei's Veto to the Emergency Law for Bahía Blanca
8 Articles
8 Articles
After the presidential rejection of the rule that seeks to provide assistance after March 7, legislators are preparing a parliamentary offensive to turn the veto. “There is cruel selectivity,” said Esteban Paulón in “Communists.” Concern over new vetoes for retirement and disability projects is growing. Read more
The national government decided on Tuesday to veto the emergency law for Bahía Blanca, which was sanctioned by Congress. The opposition went out to repudiate the measure and from the Radical Civic Union (UCR) anticipated that they would press to turn the veto. The initiative included a special fund of $200,000,000, which should be constituted within a period of no more than 30 days, and which also directed departures to the town of Coronel Rosal…
Deputies and senators of the opposition anticipated that they will work to destroy the veto to the law that the libertarian senators themselves had accompanied with their vote. The President’s decision is known in the midst of claims for more funds from the governors to Casa Rosada.
This was stated in a statement by the radical deputy Karina Banfi, from Bahia, and national senator Maximiliano Abad. They propose the creation of a special fund of $200 billion to rebuild the city.
The abolished rule established a special fund for assistance and reconstruction of the city.
"It does not overlap with the executive decree: it has greater constitutional hierarchy and wider scope," they warned The UCR's entry against Milei's veto to the emergency in Bahía Blanca: it will insist with the law was first published in #BorderJournalism.
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