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Blonde female singer fuels Raúl Alfonsín's legend
Those who really knew him actually admit former president Raúl Alfonsín was a "home a femme", a true courtly gentleman but also an old-fashioned reserved tight-lipped gentleman. How did the man who failed to keep secrets, such as the implementation of the Austral economic plan or the Pact of Olivos, manage to seal this relationship with wax, if it actually existed at all?
Alfonsín himself used to tell how he once approached to another blonde woman during a cocktail party in Spain, to find out 'she' was actually the transvestite actor Bibi Anderssen, an 80's movie start in Pedro Almodóvar's films.
"A woman's heart may hold deep secrets," Daniela told gossip journalist Jorge Rial. "I really don't know why I am telling you all this, but this is how it happened," she said. Daniela added that she had had an emotional, admirational relationship with Raúl Alfonsín. "I surely gave him something he appreciated and he certainly gave me something I needed," Daniela said.
This TV appearance managed to agitate the last moments of MERCOSUR summit and triggered conversations between the government and members of the opposition in order to make clear there wouldn't be any political profiting from this event.
The private life of every public man is usually under everybody's eye, especially when this public figure is dead, because ties of fidelity weaken and passing of time explains almost everything. Although they wouldn't confess it, politicians and other public figures consider it is better to go down in history because of blondes than unpaid debts, betrayals or sordid events (a biography on filmmaker Leopoldo Torre Nilsson reported that a sexual gadget was found in his safe).
"He was a champ," both members of the opposition and pro-government congressmen yesterday said. They are all waiting for the morals in Elisa Carrió's comments; the Civic Coalition leader claims to have been in loved with Raúl Alfonsín. Being a Catholic herself, Carrió will forgive the former president and say this issue gives an additional charm to Alfonsín. Argentina is a catholic yet not puritan country embracing outpourings of private life, which are usually condemned in Anglo-Saxon nations.
Some time ago, many members of the UCR party who used to gather at the Castelar Hotel said that former president Arturo Frondizi -almost an ascetic- used to have a secret affair with a lady. Radical leader Oscar López Serrot replied: "Don't spread the rumour, otherwise you would end up magnifying it."
Just a couple of house ago, Ricardo Alfonsín described UCR party to be more "like ethics rather than an ideology itself", which are fortunately two broad concepts in Argentina. "There are certain things we just don't do," UCR party members usually say when people ask them for a political definition. Now we all know where the limit is.
Translated by Jimena Gibert


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