With more than 42% of the votes, the pro-government bloc far surpassed Provincias Unidas and Defendamos Córdoba
Compartir:
La Libertad Avanza clearly prevailed in the national legislative elections and secured five of the nine seats at stake for Córdoba. With 99.56% of polling stations counted, the list led by Gonzalo Roca achieved a 14-point lead over the centrist experiment of Provincias Unidas, headed by Juan Schiaretti. Third place went to the pro-Kirchnerist Natalia de la Sota, leader of Defendamos Córdoba.
Preliminary results indicate that La Libertad Avanza reached 822,240 votes, equivalent to 42.35% of the total. Provincias Unidas gathered 549,839 votes, that is, 28.32%, while Defendamos Córdoba obtained 169,951 votes, with 8.75%. Further behind were Fuerza Patria with 98,758 votes (5.08%), Partido Libertario with 93,202 (4.80%), and Unión Cívica Radical with 62,847 (3.23%).
The left obtained 40,263 votes (2.07%), Alianza Encuentro por la República 31,654 (1.63%), FE party 17,895 (0.92%), and PRO 11,458 (0.59%). The other political groups obtained a merely symbolic number of votes. In total, more than three million eligible Cordobans participated, with a provincial turnout of 65.19%.
En Córdoba, La Libertad Avanza alcanzó los 822.240 votos, equivalentes al 42,35%
Five seats for the liberal ruling party
With this result, La Libertad Avanza will place Gonzalo Roca, Laura Soldano, Marcos Patiño Brizuela, Laura Rodríguez Machado, and Enrique Lluch in the Lower House. The ruling party thus consolidates its legislative presence in a province historically key to the national political map. In this regard, the most liberal province in the country once again defended President Milei's national project.
In Córdoba, more than 1,500 schools operated as voting centers and the process unfolded normally, without significant incidents. The election day ended at 6:00 p.m. and marked the first national experience with the Single Paper Ballot, whose operation was rated as positive.
At the national level, the ruling party also positioned itself as the leading force with more than 40% of the votes, strengthening the government's parliamentary base. The results confirm the support of Córdoba's electorate for a liberal model that seeks to maintain the sound economic and political course initiated by the president. Thus, against the predictions of many political analysts funded to spread erroneous data throughout the campaign, La Libertad Avanza once again prevailed in Córdoba.