"Shot dead, still alive," "a junk government," and "Cristina's head on a pike" are Cristina Kirchner's 9 most dramatic quotes.

Cristina Kirchner led an event at the PJ headquarters on Monday and described herself as a "shot victim who lives," while calling Javier Milei's government a "junk" and speaking of those who tried to put her "head on a pike."
During a presentation divided into two parts—a speech during the event and then a street address to the activists waiting for her—the leader of the Justicialist Party spoke for about an hour.
In this context, the former president took advantage of the commemoration of the 69th anniversary of the José León Suárez massacre to mention the attack she suffered in September 2022.
"I'm a woman who's been shot and is truly alive , and my life won't be long enough to thank God for being alive," she said.
Cristina Kirchner: "I am a living executioner"
Her presentation, in both segments, intertwined political history with current events and raised the possibility of a swift sentencing in the so-called "traffic case," in which she is being prosecuted for crimes involving corruption, to the point that she even considered the possibility of "being imprisoned."
But at the beginning of his presentation, he called the Libertarian administration a "hack" and then predicted its failure.
" This current government, this hodgepodge of government, will ultimately fail because these models have historically failed," he predicted. Consequently, he maintained that it is the militants' "obligation" to organize in the face of a possible return of Peronism to power.
At that moment, he made a cryptic reference to the possibility of going to prison and declared: "Whatever happens, it's sure to happen, because they won't let us continue again."
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner: "Being in prison is a testament to my dignity."
She also warned that "some people believe" they can "humiliate and defeat" Peronism, and to distinguish herself from them, she stated: "Sometimes when some people walk the streets, freeing those who made mega-swaps and twice indebted the country to the IMF, being in prison is a sign of dignity."
Last Saturday, from Corrientes, Cristina Kirchner had publicly announced her candidacy for legislator in the third electoral district of the province of Buenos Aires, and this Monday she recalled that doing so had consequences for her.
"It was enough for me to announce my candidacy for all hell to break loose," he said.
He also railed against those who question the symbolic figure of 30,000 people who disappeared during the dictatorship, saying, "Well, that's 9,000, but where are they ?" He also called them " brainless."
Another relevant phrase from the former president's speech about her possible imprisonment was when she asked, "Do you think you're going to solve this by putting me in jail? What are you going to do? Are people going to earn more money? Are you going to fund hospitals?"
"So, brother, think of another way out because I'll be in prison, but the people's situation will be worse every day , and you won't be able to solve that if you continue with this policy," in a direct message to the libertarian government.
Cristina Kirchner: "Do you think putting me in jail will make people more money?"
Also, in a new attack on Javier Milei's economic policies, he pointed out that while access to the purchase of dollars is facilitated, the rise in prices complicates workers' purchasing power, which is why, he emphasized, "They invented the wage cap."
"When money is still not enough, the remedies keep rising. When your wages aren't raised, because they've lifted the restrictions on individuals but have put a cap on wages, there comes a time when that huge capital ends up without a response because it's not enough for the 47 million Argentines," he concluded.
In another section, he positioned himself as a center of popular movements, stating: "They've always tried to intimidate the entire political class with me."
"We should have put Cristina's head on the pike to see how the governments that haven't paid the International Monetary Fund are doing," the president of the national PJ party noted.
Clarin