There is no member of the K list who doesn't have a criminal record. This is not a metaphor, it is literal. Between Jorge Taiana and Juan Grabois, they have more than thirteen pages of judicial cases: extortion, threats, illicit association, fraud, embezzlement, and usurpation, among others. These are the same people who present themselves as "defenders of the humble" while living off the State and using poverty as a business. Kirchnerism was not a political project: it was a criminal organization with parliamentary immunity.
Meanwhile, while the "criminal record list" promises to return to "recover rights," Javier Milei's government continues to do what the caste considered impossible: set a productive, free, and respected Argentina in motion. On October 7, the National Anti-Terrorism Center was created, a strategic decision that marks a turning point in national defense policy. Argentina leaves behind cowardly neutrality and complicity with violent groups. No more indulgence with terrorists disguised as social movements or "peace activists." Security is once again a matter of State policy.
In the international arena, the United States has just given the greatest demonstration of support for an Argentine economic plan in all of history: Donald Trump's government confirmed a USD 20 billion swap and the purchase of Argentine pesos in the local market, a gesture of confidence that no other democratic government had achieved. Meanwhile, while Kirchnerism destroyed relations with the free world and knelt before dictatorships, Milei rebuilds bridges with Western democracies and puts Argentina back at the table of those who produce, export, and grow.
The contrast is eloquent. In Mar del Plata, alongside the President, Lamb Weston—one of the world's leading French fry companies—inaugurated a $300 million plant, with 40,000 m² (430,556 square feet) of industrial space, 370 tons (815,710 pounds) of potatoes processed per day, 250 direct jobs, and 80% of production exported. Previously, multinationals fled in fear due to legal uncertainty, controlled exchange rates, and roadblocks. Today, they return and bet on the future.








