“Wig, wig”, was the cry of those who today at midday waited for more than an hour, under the rays of the sun, for the greeting of President Javier Milei, who visited Expoagro and spoke with entrepreneurs in the sector . Producers were the majority, but workers in input companies, machinery and banks were also mixed.
Nicolás Aladio arrived from the city of Luque, Cordoba, to visit the exhibition and take the opportunity to “give support” to the President. “He proposes a change in the way we see politics and the elimination of all unnecessary expenditure“said the farmer who produces wheat, corn, sunflower and alfalfa for export.
As far as the field is concerned, Aladio hopes that withholding taxes will be lowered, even if at first he cannot do so for the producer. “The expectations and excitement that exist are different.“, he indicated.
Milei arrived this Tuesday at the most important agricultural fair in the country accompanied by Guillermo Francos, Karina Milei, Manuel Adorni, Juan Pazos and Fernando Vilella.
“I believe a lot in this President“, launched the entrepreneur and producer Pedro Tureniec, originally from San Nicolás, who also waited for Milei’s visit to the fair to greet him.
“It will be the first step for the progress of this country. It is a very beautiful country, but run by leaders who make up other types of people, not those who work,” said the producer who plants sunflowers in Santiago del Estero. and which owns a soybean and sunflower cake plant in the city of Buenos Aires.
Likewise, he praised the President’s honesty. “What they give me is useless,The point is what you get in this country. We have lost education, respect, qualified manpower. It’s sad,” she reflected. “There’s hope. Not for me, but for my grandchildren. “They need hope,” she added.
He said he has 100 employees whose goal for many years is to grow more, but that hasn’t been possible because of Kirchner’s policies. “Now I think we will be able to grow safely. Not in a fictitious way,” she stressed.
Finally, the request made to Javier Milei is something that is replicated throughout the agricultural sector. “I only ask thislet you work and clear rules be able to produce. “I don’t want anything to be regulated,” she said.
Paulo Oliver, who produces in Bandera, Santiago del Estero, made it clear that “we have to make a transition, which is difficult… and that politicians think about the country”.
“If they take out the little things in their pockets and think about the people, we should work,” he said. the manufacturer.
Source: Clarin