The Argentine politics is witnessing a hellish spectacle where the protagonists of the national and popular project air their deepest miseries. The main character in this new chapter of decomposition is Luis D'Elía, a leader with a lengthy criminal record that includes a sentence of three years and nine months in prison for the takeover of the 24th Police Station in 2004 and an ineligibility to hold public office for eight years. This character, who was once the enforcer of the Kirchnerism in the streets, has now decided to aim his cannons at those who were once his political bosses.
The K internal conflict has escalated from whispers to war cries. Luis D'Elía launched an unprecedented ferocity against former president Cristina Kirchner, publicly humiliating her by stating that her current decisions are the result of mental degradation. According to the leader, the former president's intention to impose her son in power is "a comment from someone who is totally senile". This statement not only shatters the myth of the "boss's" infallibility but also exposes her as a figure out of touch with reality, isolated in her own dynastic arrogance.
However, the most virulent attacks were directed at the heir to the throne, Máximo Kirchner. The leader of La Cámpora, whom D'Elía labeled as an eternal slacker, was portrayed in the worst possible light, linking him to a life of excess and lack of commitment to public management. The figures and descriptions provided by the piquetero are devastating:
He accused Máximo Kirchner of being a "drug addict" who maintains a dissipated lifestyle from Monday to Sunday.
He detailed that the former president's son is "up until 5 AM with booze, girls, and drugs".









