Calls Javier Milei a “bad fascist Nazi”
The president of Venezuela and candidate for re-election in next Sunday’s elections, Nicolás Maduro, promised this Monday that they are going to “beat up the fascist extreme right.”
“I am Nicolás Maduro Moros, president of the People, and I say from Valera that we are going to win the presidential elections next Sunday, July 28. And in Trujillo we are going to beat up the fascist and racist extreme right,” he proclaimed during an event in Valera, in the state of Trujillo.
“It is not just anything that is decided on Sunday, on Sunday we are going to decide the future of Venezuela for the next 50 years,” he warned, according to the Últimas Noticias portal.
With the “fight” that they are going to give to the extreme right on July 28, the opposition will end “for a hundred years,” he highlighted, while defending the vote for him as the vote “for peace and stability.” ” from the country.
Regarding the program, Maduro has argued that he does not promise. “I don’t promise, I commit,” he stressed before announcing the delivery of several recovered works such as the rehabilitation of the José Gregorio Hernández Hospital, the Dialysis Unit in Boconó, as well as the provision of 40 new ambulance units. In addition, 100 new homes will be delivered in the Cristóbal Mendoza Urban Development.
ATTACK ON MILEI
In another act on Sunday, Maduro has again attacked the Argentine president, Javier Milei, whom he has described as a “bad fascist Nazi” who is “passing the chainsaw” to the Argentine workers.
“In these days I said, and he got angry, but I told the truth. That Milei is a bad-ass Nazi fascist, he is a bad-ass who is passing the chainsaw to the workers, to the workers, (…). Then he got angry, (…) but the truth is the truth,” he said during an event in the state of Nueva Esparta.
Thus, he asked his followers if they want “what is happening in Argentina to happen in Venezuela” and for the country to “become the social disaster of Milei’s Argentina.”
Maduro already called Milei “malparido” last Thursday, to which the Argentine Government responded that these statements did not deserve a response because they come from a “dictator” and an “imbecile,” in the words of presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni.
“Maduro is a character who has become, or has always been, a dictator. And the words of a dictator do not merit an analysis because they come from a person who has disrupted ethical and moral values and, of course, is in against what we defend and proclaim, which is democracy,” Adorni said on Friday.