National deputy Nicolás Massot defined Javier Milei's administration as an 'amoral government,' criticized the lack of self-criticism regarding alleged corruption cases, and stated that the continuity of discredited officials 'exposes the President himself.'
'They justify it by saying we were worse before, as if there were tolerable degrees of corruption,' he stated on Splendid AM 990. The deputy linked this attitude to a 'double discourse' between the government's ethical preaching and its political practice.
'None of the behaviors have absolute criteria of public ethics,' he added. He also criticized the economic policy based on the 'invisible hand of the market' and proposed the need to build a centrist political alternative with a common roadmap.
Massot stated that he observes 'two points of justification for recurring explicit corruption cases' and emphasized that in the face of scandals, 'there is never self-criticism or condemnation.' In this sense, he pointed out:
'Milei has not so far fulfilled anything he said about cutting off the hands of the corrupt.'
And concluded:
'It must be done with leadership that inspires confidence and a future, not a return to the past.'