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Argentina: The clash over rent
Following
the March 11 decision by the Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner government to
introduce a sliding tax increase – varying from 35% to 45% – on soya exports,
In
this context, the response of the left has been varied. On one hand, the
pro-Kirchner left has been joined by the Partido Comunista de la Argentina
(CPA, Communist Party of Argentina) in defending the government, while others
such the Movimiento Socialista de Trabajadores (MST, Socialist Movement of
Workers) has proclaimed its support for the ``rebellion’’ of the small
producers.
Here,
Argentine Marxist economist Claudio Katz[1]
argues for a ``third option in a moment where there is a general fatigue
amongst the population in the face of the ruralista manoeuvres and the pro-government counter
marches’’.
We also publish the
translation of a document initiated by a variety of socialist and progressive
individuals and organisations with the hope that ``a third voice in favour of
the popular majorities begins to take shape in the face of the current crisis’’.
The article and document were translated
by Federico Fuentes.
* * *
Read this article in Spanish. Click here.
* * *
By Claudio Katz
The
prolonged conflict between ruralismo
and the government has resulted in an exhausting political battle. The first
bloc aims to hoard the agrarian rent at the cost of the popular majority, and
the government needs to exhibit authority in order to implant a social pact that
favours the capitalist class as a whole.
The
actions of the so-called ``countryside’’ have escalated to the point of
creating a climate of ungovernability, and where their leaders have emboldened
themselves in the negotiations. The government reacted firmly, but it failed
and was left disconcerted. It suffered an erosion of support from voters and
governors, forcing it to look for conciliation. A new truce now seems imminent,
but regardless of whether it is achieved or not, a lasting agreement is still
an enigma. The only thing that is evident is that the conflict has eroded the
cohesion that the dominant classes had maintained during the last five years.
Causes and triggers
The
ruralistas took to the highways in
order to resist a system of sliding tax increases on the export of soya. But
they also questioned the mechanisms of taxes and subsidies that determine the
pricing of food goods. Along with the distribution of rent, they define how much
bread, milk or meat will cost.
Any
concession to ruralismo implies approximating
the local prices of these products to the increasing world price, aggravating
the increase in the cost of the family shopping basket. This increase has a
tendency to revert the decrease in the poverty index, which is currently at
around 30.3%, after having reached a low point of 26.9% during the middle of
2006.
The
conflict that is underway forms part of an old confrontation that has affected
all governments. Given that the spokespeople of the ``countryside’’ consider
themselves to be the owners of the natural rent that cultivation generates in
The
actions by the ruralistas have
brought back all the myths that the owners of the land extol. They affirm that
all of the population ``should give thanks to the countryside’’, as if they
form the laborious sector that sustains the rest of society. They suppose that
the agrarian wealth is unproductively redistributed outside of this sphere,
through a perverse system of state clientalism.
In
reality, the total opposite occurs. The private appropriation of rent
(historically by the large landowners and currently by their capitalist heirs)
has suffocated industrial development, perpetuating the insertion of the
country as a primary exporter in the international division of labour. What has
made social prosperity impossible is the absence of nationalisation measures, whether
direct or indirect (via taxes), of these resources.
The
immediate cause of the conflict has been the probable reduction of the great
benefits that the ruralistas have
obtained over the last years, as is demonstrated by the price of land or in any
other profit index for this sector.[2]
Whilst
a favourable international trade conjuncture still exists, in the context of
the crazy economic panorama strong turbulence is on the horizon. The easy benefits
that followed the hyper-devaluation have been extinguished, together with the
crippling of the regressive transference of income. Unused capacity has
dissipated, formal salaries cheapened and consumption has dried up from the
levels that predominated between 2002 and
The soya republic
Several
weeks of conflict have created the ability to better understand the agrarian
transformations that were imposed by the soya reconversion. The whole ruralista bloc participated in the model
that displaced cereals and generalised a monoculture that threatens food
sovereignty, fuels price rises in the rest of the products and contaminates the
environment. Moreover, this transformation has provoked a major concentration
of property. Just 20% of producers control 80% of the soya circuit.[3]
Three
grand sectors control the elevated rentability that this legume has generated.
In the first place, the contractors (Pool
de siembre) that live off investment funds and operate on a large scale on
leased lands. Grobocopatel, for example, only owns 10% of the
In
this chain of commercialisation – which is principally controlled by Cargill,
Bunge, Dreyfus, Nidera and Aceitera General Deheza (AGD) – the principal
benefits of soya are processed. The cultivation is managed from the field to
the ship by a private swarm of harvesters, ports and mills. Agrofinancers also
participate in these activities, operating through future buying and selling,
via speculative actions that could be affected by the sliding tax increases if
they were to establish a more foreseeable diagram of the evolution of prices.
None
of the voices of the ruralistas bloc
have questioned this capitalist circuit. They rant against the official
regulations, but they have not said a single word against the biggest owners of
this business.
The official argument
Nor
has the government mentioned the grand soya groups, since it maintains an
excellent relationship with its executives, especially with Urquía (AGD),
Grobocopatel, Elsztain and the Werthein clan. The model being implemented has
been intensely supported by the official sphere and no measure that the
Kirchners [first Nestor and then Cristina] have improvised in order to resolve
the current dispute have touched the interests of its allies. Moreover, they
are now evaluating the formation of new organisms to ``know the reality of the
sector’’, without introducing significant obligations.
The
ministers – who unleash demagogic speeches in defence of the small producer –
have for five years destined the bulk of the refunds (formally directed to
these sectors) towards subsidising the most concentrated food industries. This
conglomerate hoarded, for example, the US$473 million of compensations approved
during 2007, and given that no register of soya producers is kept, it is a
mystery exactly how they have reimbursed these privileges. To characterise
those that are the friends of the government, it is enough to recall the
minimal payment of real estate taxes, the lack of updating of obligations (in
function of the valuation of land) or the official approval of non-compliance with
social security payments.
All
of the governmental concerns have been concentrated on taxes, given that just
like with value added tax, this tax is easily collected and is not shared with
the provinces. Its collection currently is aimed at filling the coffers, not
only to sustain the aid given to business owners, but especially to confront the
rising cost of paying the external debt.
Some
supporters of the government praise the taxes in and of themselves, omitting
the fact that they capture a part of the rent without redistributing it.[4]
Those that affirm that the official initiative only failed in regards to its
timing and presentation, hide the regressive utilisation of a tax that has not
served to substantially better the level of popular life. A regulatory
mechanism – indispensable in order to divorce international prices from the
national – has been primarily utilised by the government in favour of the
powerful.
Producers and exploiters
The
conflict has illustrated just how obsolete the classic portrait of the Argentine
countryside as a landscape of unproductive large landowners and small chacareros [owners of small farms, known
as chacras] has become. But in the
new context a false image of small agrarian producers as an impoverished middle
class has been installed. The income of this group is small in comparison with
the grand capitalists in this sector, but they do not form a segment crippled
by misery.
A
small producer from the pampas region with a property of
They
maintain a solid alliance with the traditional entity of the millionaires and
jointly propose the elimination of the sliding tax increases. Nor Eduardo Buzzi
[head of the FAA] or Alfredo De Angeli [president of the FAA affiliate in Entre
Rios] has let a word slip out against the agrarian establishment.
To
justify this shift they have relied on two propositions. On one side they
affirm that ``the government has not attended to them’’ and that they had to ``act
together with other entities’’. But they forget that they could also have
attempted a program of alliances with the workers.
On
the other hand, they underline that ``the rank and file have asked us to
organise this coordinated action’’. But if this demand is true, it illustrates
the social profile of their associates, who feel at home working with the
Sociedad Rural. Those who effectively support the indebtedness and pillaging in
the heterogeneous agrarian universe have remained subordinated to this
pro-capitalist control of the Federación Agraria.
This
attitude has antecedents in the divergences that led to the clash between the
FAA and the Ligas Agrarias in the 1970s, and currently manifest themselves in
the distance that this organisation has taken from organisations of the dispossessed,
such as MOCASE [Movimiento Campesino de Santiago de Estero] or the Movimiento
Nacional Campesino Independiente.
These
organisations channel the demands of those sectors that are truly oppressed. They
represent, for example, the 300,000 peasant families kicked off their lands
during the last 10 years due to the advance of soya. They also represent the
220,000 small producers from the non-central regions who are victims of the
expansion of a cultivation that has already provoked the destruction of 1.1
million hectares.[6]
But
the most invisible sector that brings together the exploited in this area is
made up of 1.3 million rural peons. Seventy-five per cent of them work in the
informal sector and receive an average wage of 600 pesos per month [around
US$200], they make up the biggest national percentage of work accidents and
lack any social protection. This segment has not received a single drop of the
export bonanza and its total absence during the conflict confirms the
pro-capitalist character of the demands at play.
The
actions that have convulsed the countryside are a lockout, and not a rebellion
of the oppressed. It has converted itself into a pro-bosses action, with road
blockades that co-exist with the continuity of labour activities on the land.
Its protagonists hold back products from the market and speculate on the
opportune moment to sell the grain or hacienda. They are guided by market
calculations and not by the criteria of popular rebellion.
Here
is the nub of the tremendous difference with 2001. Those that act in the
countryside are not unemployed, nor are they fighting to survive, and even
those that stage cacelorazos
[pot-banging protests] in support of them in the urban areas form part of the
upper class. The messages of 2001 were inclusive, whilst the current ones are
exclusive. At that time the small savers were mobilising against the banks,
while now the rural middle class acts together with the powerful ones.
Reactions and comparisons
The
right wing has seized on the conflict in order to reinforce the political pole
it has been constructing since the triumph of Mauricio Macri [iii] in Capital
Federal. Not only have they once again taken up the neoliberal discourse, they
have also resuscitated the gorilla [iv] positions that seemed to have been
extinguished. Racist overtures extolled by the gringo European of the colonies
confronted with the cabecitas negros [v]
[black heads] of the interior has not been lacking. This skin difference has
revived the oligarchic rejection towards the ``zoological barrage’’ that they
warned about in the 1950s and they have won the support of the mass media, which
denigrates the piqueteros [vi] but
champions the participants of the tractorazos
[vii].
For
its part, the government has opted to reinforce its retreat towards the union bureaucracy
and the justicialista [viii] apparatus,
that Nestor Kirchner attempts to line up from Puerto Madero. They believe that with
this support base they will be able to counteract the failure of the transversal
project and the loss of support amongst the middle classes. But until now they
have only been able to reactivate the patotas
[ix] of the construction sector and truck drivers, who have already
repeated the bullying carried out in San Vicente [x].
The
grand pitfall of the official policy lies in the fact that Peronism has
exhausted itself as a popular movement. It is a structure to administer the state,
which no longer enthuses anyone. That is why the official marches are
operations that are rigorously controlled from above. The complementary actions
that Luis D’Elia [xi] provides also lack popular participation. They are
initiatives widely seen as manoeuvres monitored from the Casa Rosada.
For
a while the political clash between the government and the right seemed to resuscitate
an old polarisation between Peronism and anti-Peronism, but this confrontation represents
more cultural tinges than anything political, and it is very unlikely that it
will be reborn as a significant conflict.
Regardless,
what is important to avoid is false analogies that some have established
between the dispute with the agro sector and the confrontations unfolding in
Given
that its government is neither nationalist, nor has it introduced social
reforms, it is false to compare the current conflict with the situation at the
time of the first era of Peronism. Moreover, it is clear for all to see that
the threat of a coup only exists as a discourse for certain occasions. There
are no armed forces, nor sectors of the establishment interested in seeing
Cristina end up like [Eva Peron].
Positions and programs
The
left has intervened in the conflict with a variety of positions, which have
covered the whole spectrum of possible alternatives. The most inadmissible
position is that which supports the bosses’ lockout in defence of a ``small
producer’’, as if a scenario of small chacareros
confronting the large landowners continued to exist. This supposition is based on
a frozen snapshot of the past.
Moreover,
the idealisation of any struggle with the appearance of being self-convoked,
has led to a loss of bearing regarding the characterisation of the protagonists
and the demands in debate. This blindness has fed upon the false analogy with
the pot-banging protests of 2001 and the lack of knowledge of the reactionary
role that the mobilisations of the middle class (in some circumstances) can
play (as occurred with the truck drivers in
The
incapacity to register the conflicts between Kirchner and the right and the
obsession with locating the government as the principal enemy, leads to sharing
media space and practical actions with figures of the reaction.
A
symmetrical error can be seen amongst those who support the government,
accepting the argument of a coup plot. In this case, the focus is on
criticising the ruralistas and the
mass media, omitting any denouncement of the evident complicity of the
Kirchners with the soya corporations. The government is presented as the
victim, forgetting that it has been the artifice of the regressive agrarian
policy that precipitated the crisis.
It
is clear that none of the traditional arguments in defence of the government
(``lesser evil’’, ``adverse correlation of forces’’, ``dangers of the return of
neoliberalism’’) are able to disguise the connivance between the government and
soya capitalism. Despite this evidence, the resurgence of the right has pushed
some intellectuals to participate in a second wave of kirchnerista cooption.
The
belief that it is necessary to take a position in favour of the ruralistas or the government proposes a
completely false dilemma. It is perfectly possible to denounce the lockout
without supporting the government, and it is important to explain the reasons
why the taxes are necessary with modalities very different to those currently
being used.
There
is another path towards overcoming the crisis with alternative programs that
have already been formulated by various currents and left intellectuals. The
starting point is an agrarian plan to put a halt to the omnipresence of soya,
recuperation of diversity in cultivation, assurance of food sovereignty and the
facilitation of lowering of prices on food.
But
the regulatory role of the state cannot be limited to the administration of sliding,
regionalised and co-participation taxes. This intervention has to aim towards
the integral control of the circuit of agrarian production and
commercialisation through a state monopoly on foreign trade and the
nationalisation of the large exporting and commercialising corporations and the
pools de siembra. This transformation
should be accompanied by a radical modification of property relations in the
countryside, introducing progressive taxes and eradicating the conditions of
exploitation of rural workers. The most immediate action to be taken is to
overturn the dictatorship-era law that still governs this sector.
But
it is not enough to outline a package of formally correct measures if we do not
find the means by which to disseminate it in an appropriate form, establishing
links with the real conflict that confronts the ruralistas with the government. The abstentionist temptation of
declaring oneself at the margins of this clash can convert the best program
into a bit of paper lacking any influence. It is not enough to just have a
response. It is also necessary to know how to explain it, seeking to form a
third option, in a moment where there is a general fatigue amongst the
population in the face of the ruralista
manoeuvres and the pro-government counter marches.
The
current panorama could change if a popular program of transformation of the
agro sector went hand in hand with a reactivation of social protest. There is a
new fact in favour of this convergence. The rural conflict has given legitimacy
from above to direct action, since this time the organisers of the road pickets
were not the unemployed, the students, the workers or environmentalists, but
rather the actual beneficiaries of the system. This element could favour the
development of a new wave of social mobilisations.
Notes
[1]
Economist, investigador, professor. Member of EDI (Economistas de Izquierda). More
of his writings (in Spanish and English) can be found at http://katz.lahaine.org.
[2] The price of a hectare in Pergamino rose 132%
between 2003 and 2007 and the value of land in the Pampa Húmeda surpasses its
equivalent in the
[3] During the last harvest, soya already occupied 60%
of fertile land. It had displaced wheat, sunflower oil and had generated a drop
in rice, oats and rye, as well as affecting fruit growing and horticulture.
Given that RR type with glyphosate is sown, its impact in regards to
contamination has been denounced in reiterated opportunities by specialists.
The average size of farming exploitation went from
[4]
Such is the case of Humberto Tumini: ``Los aciertos y los errores’’, Página 12,
6-4-08.
[5]
Página 12, 12-5-08.
[6] Diverse reports in regards to this reality have
been expounded upon over the last few weeks in articles that have appeared in Página 12 (
Translator’s
notes
[i] Argentine Agrarian Federation: the private
institution that serves as a business organisation for small and medium
agricultural producers in
[ii] Argentine Rural Society: a private organisation
that unites the large landowners tied to agricultural activities in
[iii] Mauricio Macri: neoliberal business owner, one
of the richest men in
[iv] Gorilla: refers to the right wing, as opposed to
left-wing guerrillas.
[v]
Cabecitas negros: translates as black heads, derogatory and racist term used to
describe the followers of Peron.
[vi]
Piqueteros: roughly translates as
road picketers, movement of the unemployed who became famous during the 2001
economic crisis for their actions in blocking roads to stop the circulation of
products and goods in demand for jobs.
[vii]
Tractorazos: protests involving
tractors.
[viii] Justicialista:
referring to the tradition party of Peronism, Partido Justicialista.
[ix] Patotas:
term used to refer to union thugs used to physically attack others.
[x] San Vincente: refers to the clashes that occurred
between rival Peronists at a memorial to Juan Peron in San Vincente in 2006.
[xi] Luis D’Elia: leader of Federación de Tierra y
Vivienda, which is aligned with the government. D’Elia has also head post in
the Kirchner government.
* * *
Agrarian
conflict in Argentina : Another path to overcome the
crisis
Since March 11, when
the national government took the decision to increase taxes and make them
sliding in relation to international prices, a conflict has escalated to the
point of installing a political polarisation between the government and the
rural institutions. It is not true that we have to accept as a closed book the
arguments and the proposals of either sector, as if there were no other
proposals and measure to overcome the situation.
Behind the demands to
eliminate the sliding taxes, the rural institutions have raised a program of
liberalisation of the exporting market in food, with the aim of hoarding as
much as possible of the extraordinary rents, whilst disseminating the
ideological proposition that the state should not involve itself with private
business.
Under the cover of a
false federalism, a platform of measures aligned with the interests of
agribusiness and the Sociedad Rural Argentina is being promoted, with the
accompaniment and the social force of the small producers that have fallen into
the trap of an agrarian lockout that favours the large capitalists in the
sector and which is aimed at creating favourable conditions of a neoliberal
restoration.
The propertied classes
and the most concentrated agrarian groups can not tolerate even a timid and
inconsistent state regulation and rent distribution, raising their private
interests and increasing profits above the food, salaries, education and health
of the Argentine people. Today the countryside accumulates super profits which
are not found in any other branch of production. This uneven situation is what
allowed them to break records year after year, including at the cost of
displacing from their ancestral lands the poor peasants of the north of
The right questions
the sliding taxes, which is a regulatory mechanism that allows international
prices to be divorced from local prices and cushion the inflationary impact of
the rising prices of exportations. The lockout has transformed also itself into
a political trench from which to regressively promote a return to the
[neoliberal] period prior to [the] 2001 [economic crisis].
The cacerolazos that we have seen in the
capital and other urban centres, despite their initial heterogeneity, has been
gradually shaping itself into the antithesis of the 2001 rebellion, driven by
high sectors of society, many of them rentiers
and by the right wing opposition that had already manifested itself in the legislative
elections and in the presidential elections last October.
The majority of the
mass media, large concentrated groups that control communicational power and
the quasi monopoly on the word and image, have played a protagonist role as a
cohering force of the spineless right,
distorting reality, creating an artificial political atmosphere and a
fictitious popular opinion.
The principal concern
of the government in the face of the lockout has been to reaffirm its political
authority, faced with a sectoral challenge that breaks the equilibrium of
alliances that had sustained it, as since the beginning it has rested on a
soya-based model that it now questions. It has turned to all possible variants:
aggressive and appeasing discourse, threats and negotiations, and it has been
left politically weakened. Political incapacity and errors in technical
implementation have unified the opposing camp and led to the loss of natural
allies.
The government
deepened this schema with the ensuing displacement of producers, affecting food
sovereignty, strengthening the pools de
siembra and the exporting groups (Dreyfus, Cargill, Nidera, Bayer….),
allowing the scandalous differential appropriation between the taxes paid by
the producers and the real amounts that enter into state coffers. It is no
coincidence that these economic groups have hardly been mentioned in the
current crisis, neither by the government nor the rural institutions.
The government also
has not changed the regressive tax structure, nor adopted any initiative to
recuperate national patrimony auctioned off during Menemismo [the period of neoliberal President Carlos Menem].
Despite the phenomenal
growth rates of the current economic cycle, the strong creation of employment
and the recuperation of wages, the segmentation and flexibilisation of the
labour force persists, many of the worst labour laws of the nineties, and even
from the dictatorship like that for rural peons, have been conserved. By not
adopting measures to effectively modify the redistribution of income the gap
between rich and poor continues to widen.
The policies being
enacted cannot assure, nor do they propose, the reconstruction of a system of
cheap and ecologically sustainable railway transportation, even though there is
the project of the bullet train that would leave us dependent on technologies
that we do not possess, which is of no use for cargo transportation and which
could only be used by an elite of high income passengers.
Behind all the
paraphernalia of mutual accusations there are warning signs of divergences
within the dominant class bloc: whilst the traditional agro-financial sectors
demands giving priority to a process of accumulation based on the exportation
of primary goods and are indifferent to internal consumption and market, the
industrial sectors, on the contrary, aspire to lead this process with the
subordinated support of the agro-industrial sector.
How this dispute is
resolved is neither idle nor indifferent for the workers movement and the lower
classes, just as state intervention isn’t either, even knowing that most
probably there will be an agreement where the primary-extraction-exportation
model is not substantially modified, bring with it the social and environment
consequences and type of development that it implies, and which therefore
demands of the whole of the popular movement, the development of a proposal for
deep transformation that goes beyond these agreements.
One cannot remain
neutral in the face of the threat that the right could achieve part of its
demands and place on the future agenda its program of neoliberal restoration. A
liberalisation of exportations as demanded by the rural bloc and the ideologues
of the establishment would unleash the prices of food produce and with it the
flow on effect on real wages and living conditions and existences of the
popular classes.
We energetically and
categorically reject this blackmail and defend the right of the government to
implement sliding taxes and exportation quotas. But we believe that the path
taken up until now, far from being a lever to initiate an effective change in
the model, cohabits with it, favours the large property owners, and soya “pools”
and the large exporters, whilst affecting the governments own popular base by
demonstrating its impotence in relation to an effective control on inflation.
The undersigned aim to
contribute to changing the axis of debate and discuss popular effective
solution for agricultural.
Without it being an
exhaustive list:
We believe it is
necessary to affect the profits of the large property owners, the exporting, commercialising
groups and the pools de siembra, who
keep the bulk of the benefits. We also need to begin to discuss the
nationalisation of various segments of these sectors.
Elaborate an agrarian
plan that allows the organisation of production according to a rational program
that allows us to count on cheap and quality food for all the people. That
contemplates a policy of stimulation for small peasants and which guarantees
their lands, as well as measures to protect the environment and a policy of
putting under state control the inputs of the medium and small producers and of
differential taxes according to the amount of exportations.
Regulate foreign trade
and prices via a national grain and meat board; adopt a clear fiscal reform
deducing the tax burden on consumption, modifying the aliquots of taxes on land and profits.
Elimination of IVA on essential
products for popular consumption and effective application of the Law of Food
Supplies.
It is imperious to
overturn the law of [former military dictator Jorge] Videla in relation to the
rural peon and guarantee the coverage of all the informal workers, as well as
guaranteeing the purchasing power of the wages for all workers and subsidies
for the unemployed.
With this declaration
we hope that a third voice in favour of the popular majorities begins to take
shape in the face of the current crisis.
Initial signatories:
Claudio Katz, Guillermo Almeyra, Maristella Svampa,
Hugo Calello, Susana Neuhaus, Guillermo Gigliani, Alejandro Bercovich, Mabel
Bellucci, Eduardo Faletty, Ezequiel Adamovsky, Claudia Korol, Clara Algranatti,
Jose Seoane, Antonio Bitto, Jorge Marchini, Jorge Sanmartino, Eduardo Lucita,
Bruno Fornillo, Martin Bergel, Diana Mauri, Ricardo Orzi, Guido Galafassi,
Agustín Santella, Gustavo Robles, Emilio Taddei, Judith Feldman, Leandro
Sowter, Mabel Twaites Rey, Aldo Casas, Nora Ciapponi, Antonio Por, Beatriz
Morales, Claudio Pandolfi, Pablo Guillermo
FRISCO, Irene Muñoz, Herman Schiller, Guillermo Caviasa, Julio Vergara, Ariel
Petruccelli, Alejandro Medici, Franco Catalani, Manuel Gonzalo Navarro, Aníbal
Viguera, Alberto Wiñaszki, Eduardo Gorostegui, Nicolás Lion. Meriem Choukroum,
Mariano Féliz, Liliana Soto, Octavo del Valle, Fernando Stratta, Joaquin S.
Gomez, Carlos M. Herrera, Hernan Camarero, Silvana Ferreira, Omar Acha, Hernan
Apazza, Agustín nieto, Leandro Andrini, Carlos “Perro” Santillán, Fabio Resino
– Pte. FACTA-Coop. BAUEN, Luciana Santillán-Coord. Corriente del Pueblo Jujuy.,
Bloque Piquetero Nacional, Frente de Trabajadores Combativos-Movimiento
29 de Mayo (FTC-Ml29), Movimiento Teresa Rodriguez
Adhesiones a: jorgesanmartino4@fibertel.com.ar,
eduardo.lucita@gmail.com


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