The deputy seeks to “cover up” failure K by trying to seduce a province that massively rejects her model.
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The national deputy Victoria Tolosa Paz launched a proposal that sounds like political desperation when trying to attract Peronism in Córdoba to a national front sharedwith Kirchnerism. In a recent radio interview, the Buenos Aires legislator stated that there is no viable country project without the active participation of the Mediterranean province. However, his approach ignores the fact that the Cordovan electorate is the most anti-Kirchnerist in Argentina and supports the majority of the
direction currently led by Javier Milei.
The attempt of the leader of Union for the Fatherland to seat Martín Llaryora and Juan Schiaretti at the same table seems like a delusional exercise in absolute fiction. Tolosa Paz proposes to “remove ideological labels”, a transparent strategy to disguise a Kirchnerism that refuses to carry out any self-criticism for its failed efforts. The electoral reality shows that Córdoba will never accept joining a structure that has historically mistreated and discriminated against it from the
central power.
This new proposal is nothing more than the same model as always with the same actors, but trying to present a renewed face to hide the old recipes that plunged the country. “It seems that using the word Kirchnerism has a resonance that precisely prevents consensus and dialogue,” the deputy admitted with an astonishing naivety.
It is clear that the people of Córdoba do not forget the damage caused and will not be deceived by this gross discursive makeup of the Buenos Aires leadership.Tolosa Paz proposes that Córdoba join Kirchnerism to face Milei
Discursive disguises for an exhausted proposal
The
Buenos Aires legislator desperately seeks an alliance with the productive interior to try to recover a relevance that Kirchnerism lost at the polls. He argues that there are assets such as the automotive industry and agriculture that make Córdoba essential, although its political space has always suffocated them with taxes. Pretending that the leaders of Córdoba join this “AntiMilei” army is a rant that has no basis in the current political reality
.
Despite the fact that Tolosa Paz mentions legislative dialogues with deputies from Córdoba on specific issues, the ideological distance between the two sectors is now insurmountable. “The first thing we have to do is stop thinking of politics as categories,” said the deputy trying to erase a past of divisions that her own party perpetrated.
No language strategy can convince a province that values effort and production to join a project based on welfare.
National Peronism, personified in figures such as Axel Kicillof or Cristina Kirchner, remains the insurmountable limit for any leader from Córdoba with serious aspirations. The attempt to add to the Mediterranean province is a tacit admission that Kirchnerism cannot return to power without those whom it historically despised. Córdoba will continue to be the bastion of national resistance against these ideas that have already failed, reaffirming its productive identity far from