• 4 days ago
👉 Esta propuesta surge en un contexto donde se considera que hay prioridades más relevantes en Argentina y se busca evitar que este dinero salga del bolsillo de los ciudadanos. Se argumenta además que la ciudad de Buenos Aires, ahora con estatus casi provincial y autonomía para decidir cuándo elegir a sus representantes, debería realizar estas elecciones de manera separada para evitar la influencia del gobierno nacional en la legislatura porteña.

👉 Seguí en #ElNoticieroDeA24
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00:00In the same sense, we ask the national government to suspend the elections at the national level.
00:08We believe that also, as I expressed yesterday to the head of the National Cabinet, Guillermo Francos,
00:16with whom we agree, it would be a very good step at the national level to suspend the elections.
00:24That is, at the national level, that election step would allow us to save more than 200 billion pesos
00:32that the Argentines do not have, nor should we give ourselves the luxury of spending today
00:38with so many other priorities more relevant than there are in Argentina.
00:43We want then that those 20 billion pesos, that money, does not leave the pocket of the Porteños
00:49and we can, from our budget, use it in other priorities.
00:55We want the Porteños to be able to elect the legislators without having to pay for the cost
01:02of a mechanism that politics has to be able to resolve inwardly.
01:06That is why eliminating or suspending in this legislative election, I pass them.
01:11Building consensus, with the search for internal agreements, or simply with the healthy competition
01:17that will get the best out of each one of us and each political space.
01:24But the electoral agenda is the one that concerns us particularly today,
01:28because the deadlines and the times that the law establishes force us today to make an important decision.
01:37Today we decided to unfold the legislative elections of the city of Buenos Aires
01:42and together we are going to send a project and call the legislature to extraordinary sessions
01:49to deal with the suspension of the elections in the city of Buenos Aires.
01:55I talked with many political spaces, practically with all of them, and we agreed on two things.
02:01On the value of having an electoral discussion agenda that focuses on the problems of the city,
02:07and also on suspending the elections in the city of Buenos Aires.
02:12That is undoubtedly the best decision we can make, because it will allow us, among other things,
02:18to save more than 20 billion pesos in an election that, in general,
02:24in the legislative field, never has a real competition within the political spaces.
02:29Well, this announcement of the unfolding of the elections, already with a date and with an armed electoral calendar,
02:36is what is being talked about in the red circle, in politics.
02:39It is the announcement that Jorge Macri made a few hours ago,
02:44and in this way, challenging the national government and President Mila.
02:50And Pablo, how are you? How are you?
02:52Three titles of this day.
02:53First, the city government unfolds the elections.
02:56There will be no competitive elections between the port legislators and the national deputies.
03:02What does it mean? We are going to go, the port people, to vote in July.
03:06July 6 is the date, port legislators.
03:10And in August and October, if there is a pass, we are going to vote for deputies and national senators.
03:16Well, it is a challenge from Jorge Macri.
03:18It is an affront that Jorge Macri is doing to the government of Javier Milea, to the national government.
03:23This has a main reading, which is, if they went together, the election would be nationalized,
03:30and therefore it would be a plebiscite.
03:32Milei yes, Milei no.
03:33Whenever there is a split, that is what is sought, Pablo.
03:36Nationalizing an election, many provinces have done it.
03:39Yes, but it had never happened in the city of Buenos Aires,
03:43it had never happened in the city of Buenos Aires with port legislators.
03:46Yes, it had happened with the head of government,
03:49which was elected in July, head of government, and in October, president.
03:53It had never happened with port legislators.
03:57Because it is assumed that it is a slightly smaller election.
04:00So, to bother people who do not even know,
04:03you know who the port legislators are, we do not have it very clear,
04:06especially in these last legislatures that were drawn out.
04:08At some point there were weight legislators.
04:10So, what is sought?
04:12If they went together, what was going to happen was the plebiscite.
04:15Milei yes, Milei no.
04:16The pro in that scheme was drawn out, and it was going to lose the majority in the port legislature.
04:22Therefore, Jorge Macri was going to complicate the governability.
04:24Well, that's why it's a challenge.
04:26The word challenge in political analysis you do not like.
04:28It is a challenge that makes a Macri, in this case Jorge Macri, to the national government.
04:33Wait a minute.
04:34It is a wire his territory.
04:36But there is more news.
04:38With Fer we share repercussions and more political analysis.
04:42Dr. Pablo Manini is already there.
04:44I'm going with you, doctor, who is a constitutionalist, and we always consult him.
04:47Fer.
04:48Three brief repercussions on social networks,
04:50especially on the ex-social network, which is usually where they usually manifest.
04:53First, Jorge Macri giving a detail of why he believes that unfolding is necessary within his social network.
05:00And being cited by several people.
05:02For example, by Ocaña, one of the legislators,
05:04who talks about not being able to make electoral reforms,
05:08nor spend money from the porters to favor a political sector or a leader.
05:12Why would the porters have to vote three times if we can do it together in a national election?
05:16There is a whole long message from Ocaña explaining this,
05:18which has now given Twitter or Ex, as they want to say,
05:20that one can write more.
05:22Maybe less, of course.
05:24Yes, because it is a long text.
05:26The first Ocaña repercussion, in this case, is that politically.
05:30It is like a part of what was once a political front.
05:36Yes, points for the change.
05:38That's why you have to see how it is read,
05:40because you have to see what alliances are being sought, Graciela Ocaña, in that ecosystem.
05:43Well, let's see.
05:44Well, Gabriel Solano from El Pueblo Obrero,
05:46also another of the critics of this decision and the expense it generates,
05:49and in addition to the situation that arises from the split,
05:52Laurita Alonso, who we saw in...
05:54Laura Alonso, who debuts with a position of...
05:56A position of spokeswoman, she will be like Adorni,
05:58but from the government of the city of Buenos Aires.
06:00And who was on Jorge Macri's side prior to the announcement,
06:02and then she was the one who answered the questions to the colleagues.
06:04Very well. Now I'm going to listen to Laura Alonso.
06:07There I see, I hear more repercussions.
06:09Yes, the only thing.
06:10No, Laura Alonso says,
06:11Buenos Aires first, always, also citing Jorge Macri's tweet.
06:14And the last thing.
06:16Did you see that on the social network, Twitter,
06:18one usually goes to look for old messages?
06:19Yes.
06:20They went to look for an old message from April 9, 2023, from Mauricio Macri.
06:23Here, the file, Fer.
06:24Yes, from Mauricio Macri, and they retweeted it.
06:26Of course.
06:27They consulted me today about the possibility of unfolding elections in CABA.
06:30It clearly represents more state spending, more rows, more time,
06:33two ballot boxes and ballots, and the unusual situation of people
06:37who have to vote in different classrooms and schools could even arise.
06:40A Mauricio Macri, Jorge Macri's cousin,
06:44opining at the time, April 9, 2023.
06:46You have to understand context, always.
06:48Well, let's see.
06:49Second news.
06:50Speaking of context, because Fer uses a word that is fundamental, context.
06:54When I tell you about the word challenge, Pablo, Fer,
06:58and now we open it with Dr. Emanili,
07:02is that this occurs in a context of tug-of-war between Millet and Macri.
07:08Macri, I mean Mauricio.
07:10I mean, this feeling that you described just now,
07:14that if Jorge Macri does not accelerate and shield his territory,
07:17the libertarians sweep it and take it away,
07:21it is a real, political feeling.
07:23They are reading that this can happen,
07:25because it is already happening at the electoral level,
07:28in the electoral perception, in a year that starts before the end of 2024,
07:34and before we get into 2025, it already starts with an electoral climate.
07:38The pro feels and knows that it is a party in the path of disappearance,
07:42in the path of extinction.
07:44There is no place on the political map for the pro in this scheme.
07:48The only option that the pro has to survive is to shield the Porteño territory.
07:53That is why we also see Laura Alonso taking on a position,
07:56because it is how we give political volume to the Porteño government,
08:01adding officials and historical leaders of the pro,
08:05to shield and see what happens with the government.
08:07Sorry, with all due respect,
08:08does Laura Alonso give political volume to Jorge Macri?
08:11If so, no, no.
08:13Is she a heavyweight leader of the pro or not?
08:16Yes, yes, yes, it catches my attention.
08:18There were other faces too, we will review them later.
08:20There were other faces.
08:21But I say, she is a heavyweight leader,
08:23she is a historical leader of the pro,
08:26she is not a newcomer.
08:27If you have Laura, let's explain what...
08:29She is not the one who was Vicente López's spokeswoman,
08:32which is more or less how Jorge Macri would have handled until now.
08:35Give me what the flamboyant Porteño spokeswoman, Laura Alonso, said.
08:40Let's listen to her.
08:41We have been fulfilling 30 years since the reform of the national constitution,
08:47when it was decided that the city of Buenos Aires
08:51would cease to be the federal capital
08:54to become an autonomous city,
08:58almost with the status of a province,
09:01but with all the autonomy to have their own powers,
09:04their government, their budget, their constitution,
09:07their autonomy to decide.
09:10Among them, the autonomy to decide when to elect their representatives to the legislature.
09:17And precisely for all these reasons,
09:19for the presentation of this broad agenda of reforms,
09:23we understand and the head of government has understood
09:26that the best decision to promote a debate
09:30that puts Buenos Aires first,
09:32that gives the citizens of the city the opportunity to elect the legislators,
09:38we have to do it separately,
09:41we have to do it in an unbiased way.
09:43It will not be the first time,
09:45but it is the first time that in 30 years
09:47the city of Buenos Aires will face a local election
09:51with an institutional maturity that it did not have before.
09:55Because our Porteño electoral code is from 2018
09:59and today we already have a consolidated electoral management institute
10:04and also an electoral tribunal of the city of Buenos Aires.
10:10Well, up to there the presentation that Jorge Macri did early,
10:15if you just started the day,
10:17because there are people who are on vacation mode with 22.2 degrees the temperature.
10:21Today early, when it is starting to close on 2024,
10:25we are starting to put ourselves in electoral mode.
10:28That must also be read.
10:30I don't know how that generally falls on people
10:33who are starting to see if they can take a few days off.
10:38Because basically, in general terms,
10:42of course you have to vote,
10:44at some point you will have to review this idea of ​​voting every two years in Argentina,
10:48because all the time you put politics in electoral mode
10:51and we already know what happens with politics in electoral mode.
10:54I was telling you, three news.
10:56One, unfolding.
10:57Two, the steps of the city of Buenos Aires are sought to be eliminated.
11:01They are two different things.
11:02They are two different things.
11:03For the unfolding, the decree that Jorge Macri already signed is enough.
11:07The second issue is that you do not have to vote twice,
11:11that you do not have to go to vote first the internal of the parties
11:13and then the general election.
11:15For this, it is necessary to send a bill to the Porteño legislature
11:20that has to be approved with a special majority
11:23and that needs, yes or yes, the support of other political blocs.
11:26Let me add Dr. Emanili, constitutionalist,
11:29that whenever we come across theoretical issues, we call him.
11:34Pablo, how are you?
11:36Good morning.
11:37What are you seeing?
11:39Let's see, no electoral reform is innocent.
11:42Whenever someone promotes a change of date,
11:46a suspension of elections, a modification of something,
11:49it is because it suits him.
11:50This is the first thing we have to take into account.
11:52There they are lying to the citizens because they are saying
11:55electoral reform, tax suppression, well,
11:59it is an ornament to justify what they are doing.
12:03Evidently, the internal started between two factions of the current government,
12:07that is, the Macrism and the Milley.
12:09I just noticed that it is Jorge Macri
12:12defying, without a doubt, Javier Milley or Jorge Macri
12:17or the government or what is left of the Macrimo defying the libertarians.
12:22Yes, this is the first point.
12:23I agree with what Pablo said,
12:25that this seeks to plunder the city
12:27so as not to be dragged by the national election.
12:30I see another lie when the head of government says
12:33with this we are going to save with the suspension of the passes.
12:36Well, but at the same time it is unfolding.
12:38Another aspect of the debate is whether it is a waste or not.
12:40But at the same time it is unfolding the election,
12:42with which it has the double cost.
12:45The Portuguese are going to vote first legislators and then national deputies.
12:49It does that and at the same time it asks the national government
12:52to suppress the passes to save.
12:54What are we left with?
12:55Or do we spend double to make the de-double?
12:57Because one thing, the de-double of elections is a faculty of the Portuguese executive.
13:01But the suspension of the passes has to go to the legislature,
13:05which is the area, so to speak,
13:08There is an electoral law of the city of Buenos Aires
13:12that says that there has to be a double turn.
13:14On the other hand, the electoral law of the city of Buenos Aires
13:16allows the head of government to set the date of the election,
13:20unlike what happens at the national level,
13:22where the schedule is already established by law.
13:25This was done at the time, Horacio Rodríguez Larreta,
13:28because he speculated, let's see if I go with Macri,
13:31if I have to go with Macri or not in the re-election of 2019
13:34to see if I add a few doors to Macri or not.
13:37Everything is done by political calculation.
13:39I argue a little with the two Pablos.
13:43Why if this is done by, I don't know,
13:47we have seen it with San Juan or La Rioja, I don't remember.
13:50All the provinces do it.
13:52Well, if all the provinces de-double
13:54and we recognize the autonomy of the city
13:56in the constitution of 1994, if I'm not mistaken.
14:00Why do we question the city
14:05and we haven't done it with other provinces?
14:07No, but we are not questioning the city.
14:09What we are saying is that there is a contradictory message.
14:11At least that's what I said.
14:13That is, on the one hand they say we are going to save
14:15and we ask the national government to suspend the steps.
14:19No province can ask the national government for something like that.
14:22That is a law of the Congress of the Nation
14:24and the head of government is not who to ask the national government to do that.
14:28Because it is a decision of the parliament.
14:30Very clear.
14:31But at the same time you are saying suspend the steps because it is expensive,
14:34you are de-doubling the election, which is also expensive.
14:36There is also a point of why he wants to have his own election,
14:40the issue of the port.
14:42There I am going to enumerate it, Fer.
14:44Because I think that is extremely important.
14:46Lucas Romero is with us, political analyst.
14:49Lucas, how are you? Facundo Pastor from AQUINA24.
14:52How are you?
14:54Yes, you know, Facundo, I hear you with great difficulty.
14:57I can hardly identify what you are saying.
14:59Well, let's see if it gets a little better there.
15:01Does it get better for you?
15:02I raise the communication and we manage to improve with Lucas,
15:06which is always important to listen to.
15:08Fer, you marked me points.
15:10Yes, in fact, they are the points and arguments that the government provides.
15:13Yes, the issue of an electoral reform, reduction of tax burden,
15:15institutional reform with administrative and management changes,
15:18deepening of autonomy.
15:19These are the points that Jorge Macri adds to what he had said at the conference
15:23and also treated the issue, Pablo had mentioned something about the port treaty,
15:27as issues typical of the city of Buenos Aires,
15:30which is why he believed that this election was important
15:33and to define the legislators well.
15:35What happens is that...
15:36They will have to vote in the future, right?
15:38The same pro that is now talking about autonomy is the pro that decided
15:42at the time when it was convenient for him to stick it to the national
15:45to promote his national project, he decided to unify them.
15:48The port elections were always unfolded,
15:52in the position of head of government, in the executive position,
15:55they were always unfolded.
15:56When were the national elections folded?
15:58In 2019.
15:59Because Macri needed to add votes to guarantee his re-election
16:02and they assumed that...
16:04In fact, it went very well for him in that election, in his re-election,
16:07it was the first time that a head of government manages to win without going to the ballot box.
16:12They assumed that the votes of the re-election were going to favor
16:15Mauricio Macri in his search for re-election.
16:18That finally did not happen.
16:20But beyond that, that is when that decision of autonomy
16:24by the city of Buenos Aires is broken.
16:26In legislative elections they were always together.
16:29Because it is clear, nobody knows who the legislators are.
16:32It is a huge wear and tear for the citizens to have to go to vote twice
16:36in a scheme of this type.
16:38Now, if what is sought is to strengthen the autonomy of the city of Buenos Aires,
16:43well, a reform can also be made to the electoral legislation of the city of Buenos Aires
16:48and guarantee by law that they are always separated.
16:51And there you avoid this, it suits me, it does not suit me.
16:54The perception that both Pablos have is that what is sought is a political benefit.
17:00That is, nobody makes a political decision or faces a strategy to lose.
17:04This is clear.
17:05Absolutely, but I also do not see the reasons why.
17:08Because this of deepening the autonomy of the city ...
17:11Well, more or less.
17:12The autonomy of the city is given by the 129 of the national constitution
17:16and by the constitution of the city, which is from the year 96.
17:19What are they going to deepen?
17:21Legally.
17:22Empty.
17:23This has no legal content, this of deepening the autonomy of the city.
17:28More or less, Pablo, sorry.
17:30Let me discuss.
17:31It is to discuss.
17:33Because if the elections were together and freedom advances,
17:38it is going very well in the city of Buenos Aires, as the polls indicate,
17:42depending on whether the Porteño electorate decides to endorse a national project.
17:47And, half-deceived, it also ends up supporting the Porteño legislature.
17:52What happens is that the interference of freedom of advance in the Porteño legislature
17:57and in the Porteño management,
17:59will make the city end up being an appendix of the national government.
18:03So, beware that this also defends the autonomy of the city of Buenos Aires,
18:07as it defends the autonomy of the provinces that decide to divide the election.
18:11The problem is when I arbitrarily decide to be autonomous.
18:16Are you belittling the voter?
18:18Of course, I was totally going to say that.
18:20What does this mean?
18:21That the voter of the federal capital, when he votes together with the national,
18:26does not know how to vote and is left to be dragged by a national tide,
18:31and does not think about the local legislators?
18:33It seems to me that it is underestimating the electorate.
18:35I think the same as the doctor thinks.
18:37If the discussion is technical, about autonomy,
18:39which is a very tedious discussion,
18:41all of us who have gone through some constitutional process
18:44have had a teacher with more or less affection to discuss the autonomy of the city,
18:50which, as the doctor explained,
18:52was born in the constitution of 1994, in the reform,
18:56but it has just begun to have its own regulatory body in 1996.
19:02Let's remember that in the past it was spoken of as a mayor of the city of Buenos Aires,
19:06designated by the president.
19:09I don't want to give names because they are going to...
19:12No, give the names you want.
19:13I'm not going to give the names,
19:14but I want to tell a story from 2003,
19:17of a national deputy who entered Congress.
19:21Today she is an official, an important leader.
19:25She entered Congress.
19:26Obviously, when you look at the polls,
19:28she didn't exist.
19:29She was a completely unknown person.
19:31She entered Congress for one reason,
19:34which is that her list number was close to Aníbal Ibarra's list,
19:39and her list number was lower than the official list number
19:43that Aníbal Ibarra had as head of government.
19:46It was closer to the door of the dark room.
19:49And a completely unknown leader...
19:52A Transilvanian.
19:53It could be.
19:55Completely unknown.
19:57She ended up having 7 or 8% of the votes.
19:59And with that, she entered the National Congress with a bank.
20:02So, I would like to say that people, if they think,
20:06put a stone and say,
20:07I'm going to decide which local legislator I want to vote for,
20:10but in practice it doesn't happen.
20:12So, in practice, what people choose
20:15is the main section of the list
20:18and a very minority percentage.
20:20How are Pablo's numbers?
20:22I respect what you say,
20:24but one thing is that you say it.
20:25It's a political analysis after adopting a measure.
20:28And another thing is that a head of government
20:30uses this as an excuse to change the date of the elections.
20:33They are two completely different things.
20:35Do they coincide from an ethical point of view?
20:37Exactly.
20:38We can debate it and we can agree or not.
20:40The other thing, from the government,
20:42is to underestimate the citizens.
20:44To write it as a cause to promote autonomy.
20:48Is autonomy so risky?
20:50Not at all.
20:52In no way.
20:54The Supreme Court of Justice of the nation,
20:56in the last ten years, I would say,
20:59has been making daily mistakes
21:02in defense of the autonomy of the city,
21:04promoting the autonomy of the city and strengthening it.
21:07The only thing the city lacks to be totally autonomous
21:10is the transfer of national justice.
21:12That is, civil judges, commercial judges,
21:14and labor judges,
21:16who are still national and should already be local.
21:19Yes, there is a very strong resistance to that.
21:21There is a huge political and judicial problem.
21:24But apart from that,
21:26the autonomy of the city of Porteño enjoys good health.
21:29Why is this decision of Macri so innocuous in the national government?
21:32Well, at first there was rejection,
21:34because the national government also intended
21:37to strengthen freedom of movement in the territory of Porteño
21:41thanks to the drag that the figure of Miley, Adorni, Carina,
21:46who was the candidate for freedom of movement,
21:48Patricia Bullrich, who was the candidate...
21:50By the way, prepare Adorni's court yesterday,
21:53where they ask him if he is going to be a candidate.
21:56And there we reveal a little what the presidential spokesman says,
21:59or said the presidential spokesman.
22:01Well, this obviously does not like at the national level.
22:04Now, in the middle there was an announcement,
22:07a sloppy announcement,
22:09which is that Jorge Macri says
22:11that he spoke with Guillermo Francos,
22:14the head of the national cabinet,
22:16and that he told him that he would like
22:18that the suspension of the steps that he is proposing
22:20at the level of the city of Buenos Aires
22:22also be replicated at the national level.
22:24And this opens a whole new political panorama,
22:27because it implies, and this is the third news of the day,
22:30it implies that the PRO opens a negotiation with the national government
22:34to suspend the steps at the national level.
22:37That is, that it is not voted in August,
22:39and then in October, as usually happens
22:41since the reform was made in 2009,
22:43but that it is voted directly in October.
22:45This is development news.
22:47This is something that Jorge Macri told.
22:49We would have to see what Mauricio thinks,
22:51and what the PRO thinks at the national level.
22:53But if there was that agreement,
22:55I would practically tell you that the numbers would be there
22:57to suspend the steps at the national level.
22:59I think I have a cut from Laura Alonso.
23:01If we can, if we have it, let me know.
23:04Let's hear it. Let's hear what the spokeswoman said.
23:08I think we have some questions to answer.
23:11I imagine that the first is to know
23:14when the elections are going to be held,
23:17in which all the patrons,
23:21which are 3 million in the pattern of the city of Buenos Aires,
23:26we are going to elect 30 legislators.
23:29And this is going to happen on Sunday, July 7,
23:33sorry, Sunday, July 6,
23:36by decision of the head of government, Jorge Macri.
23:42There is the date, then.
23:44There confirms the date, Laura Alonso.
23:46You are at home, just starting the day,
23:48in a festive and licensed climate.
23:52Yes? It is not our case, Clarita, that we are here.
23:55But hey, a little festive, yes.
23:59Now, let's start thinking about the electoral map,
24:02or in the electoral calendar,
24:04that the patrons are going to have,
24:06that they are going to have to vote on July 6.
24:09Yes.
24:10Correct?
24:11And then they are going to have to vote
24:13for national deputies and national senators.
24:15Exactly.
24:16When? With PASO, ESPASO, Primera Vuelta?
24:19How is it? Let's see.
24:20At this time there are PASO elections,
24:23election, there I tell you the exact date, right?
24:25Go ahead.
24:26PASO elections in August,
24:28general elections in October.
24:30There you have it.
24:31July, a July, an August and an October.
24:34Yes.
24:35Exactly.
24:36Exactly.
24:37There are three different voting days,
24:39three different Sundays to vote.
24:41Opening schools, doing broadcasts,
24:45Yes.
24:46doing campaigns.
24:48How, I say, is it thought that way?
24:51Let's see, the idea would be,
24:53August 3 would be the PASO,
24:57and then the general elections would be elected in October,
25:00on October 26.
25:03In addition to July 6, the general elections.
25:06There would be three instances.
25:08If PASO is eliminated, you go directly to October.
25:10Yes.
25:11Then it would be July and October.
25:13In addition, we have to add to all this ...
25:15If PASO is eliminated at the national level,
25:17which is what you say is being worked on.
25:20Are the numbers at the national and local level
25:22to eliminate PASO?
25:24So far, at the national level, they were not.
25:26Because the PRON did not want to eliminate PASO,
25:28because it speculated that if there was an alliance
25:31with the Libertad de Avanza,
25:33it was better that the places on the lists were decided by the people in the vote,
25:36and not that everything was subordinated to the pen of my law.
25:39But if now, if now Jorge Macri is saying,
25:42suspend the national PASO,
25:44an instance of negotiation is opened,
25:46which, with an open end at least.
25:48Good. Doctor?
25:49Be careful that the constitutions establish aggravated majorities
25:52for any reform of the electoral law.
25:55For example, the national constitution, in article 77,
25:58says that any electoral norm
26:01can be sanctioned with an absolute majority
26:03of all members of the chambers.
26:05And the constitution of the city has a similar norm.
26:08So what the constituent is looking for,
26:10what the constitution is looking for, is consensus.
26:13Not that a minority or an occasional majority
26:16imposes on the other a certain way of choosing
26:19or a certain electoral calendar.
26:21But that all this is done by consensus of the political forces.

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