The governor of Mendoza, Alfredo Cornejo, strongly supported the message of President Javier Milei during the Opening of the Ordinary Sessions of the 2026 Congress and called for supporting the process of structural reforms promoted by the national Government.
Through his X account, the president of Mendoza stressed that the presidential speech made it clear that the adopted course is aimed at “ordering the country and projecting it into the future.” As he said, Argentina needed leadership willing to move forward with profound transformations, many of them postponed for years due to lack
of political decision.
Support for the economic system and structural reforms
,
Cornejo stressed the importance of consolidating the economic system and advancing structural changes that would make it possible to leave behind decades of fiscal imbalances, chronic inflation and productive stagnation. In this regard, he stressed that accountability for management allows us to measure both the progress achieved and the
remaining challenges.
The governor stated that the reform process must be sustained with institutional responsibility to ensure that the changes are “profound and lasting.”
Their support is part of a key political support line to strengthen governance and provide predictability to markets. Prelude to the tour to the United States
The Opening of Ordinary Sessions also served as a prelude to a strategic international agenda. Cornejo plans to accompany Milei at Argentina Week in New York, where leaders from the financial, technological and energy worlds will meet
.
The event will include meetings at the headquarters of JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America, as well as a welcome cocktail at the Consulate General of Argentina. The tour aims to consolidate ties with investors and reinforce the official strategy of attracting capital to boost growth.
In a context where international integration and macroeconomic stability are central axes of the government program, the support of governors like Cornejo reinforces the political signal of support for the course chosen by the Milei administration and for the decision to move forward with structural reforms that seek to leave behind the model of recurrent crises.