President of the Chamber of Deputies, Martín Menem, admitted the political differences he maintains with presidential advisor Santiago Caputo. The Riojan also expressed his preference for internal ruling coalition divisions to remain private and stay 'in the locker room.' 'Some call them internal disputes. You enter a company, get promoted, move to another place,' he stated, adding, 'This entails a certain 'risk,' and we still need to start a cultural shift by assuming that one will not begin or end their life in the same place. This makes the economy more capitalist and will bring much more prosperity to the entire population.' At the close, addressing rumors about upcoming changes, he clarified that the presidency of the Chamber of Deputies belongs to the ruling coalition and expressed hope for the new composition of the libertarian bloc, which will have about 90 own deputies plus allies. 'On December 10, we will start from scratch to see how commissions are assigned. We came out to play, and we are all playing for the same team,' the legislator emphasized. He believed that the self-criticism is that these differences of criteria were made public. 'It's not good, we have things to correct,' he added. Furthermore, he stressed: 'An election has passed, it was successful, but with the same humility, we have to rethink decisions to be made. We are going to have more presence. When it comes to issuing opinions, LLA is starting to be an important actor.' In his view, this system points to 'greater flexibility' and an increase in registered personnel. 'There is a culture, years old, that when you get a job, you think you will be there for life. The permanent staff... life works another way. Pure billiards.' Menem also expressed his satisfaction with the implementation of the Single Paper Ballot (BUP) in the recent elections.
Martín Menem Admits Differences with Caputo and Calls for Unity in Ruling Coalition
President of the Chamber of Deputies, Martín Menem, acknowledged political differences with presidential advisor Santiago Caputo. He called for keeping ruling coalition disputes private, framing it as a 'cultural shift' toward a more capitalist economy. Menem also expressed satisfaction with election results and the implementation of the Single Paper Ballot.