Córdoba's political scene delivered a postcard over the weekend that was as striking as it was unexpected in the mountain city of Tanti. There, at a meeting led by Juan Schiaretti, the current mayor of Cosquín, Kirchnerist Raúl Cardinali, and his predecessor, Socialist Gabriel Musso, came together. What was remarkable is that both, with a relationship marked by rivalry, shared the same space under the Provincias Unidas banner.
The meeting focused on tourism, with a speech by Schiaretti highlighting the sector as a driver of employment, investment, and international projection. However, what lingered in the air was not the economic message but the political photo. The mayor and his predecessor, rivals in their city, were presented as part of the same structure in a framework of oversight and territorial presence.
The gesture reveals how Cordobesismo managed to dominate the provincial political scene to the point of bringing together at the same table those who compete for power in Cosquín. In the absence of clear opposition (now, in fact, virtually nonexistent), Cardinali and Musso seem to become two sides of the same coin. A coin that, curiously, always revolves around Schiaretti's leadership through servile obedience to each of his orders.









