The councilwoman was appointed as the new authority of the provincial PRO amid the internal conflict
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The national leadership of PRO decided to once again intervene in its Córdoba branch and appointed Councilwoman Soher El Sukaria to lead the process. The decision was confirmed after a vote in CABA where it was determined to make an institutional shift to organize the party for the upcoming electoral calendar. The new leadership assumes the commitment to rebuild relationships and ensure clear rules within the organization.
El Sukaria's arrival takes place in an environment marked by months of internal tensions that stalled party work. The councilwoman will be tasked with strengthening the structure, opening channels for dialogue, and reinforcing PRO's identity in Córdoba. In radio statements, the leader stated that she will work for "the growth of the organization" and for a reorganization that restores predictability to the party.
The intervention is supported by sectors that have been demanding stable leadership aligned with the national strategy. For the new official, the main challenge will be to revitalize territorial presence after a year marked by internal disputes. Her appointment aims to solve accumulated conflicts and undertake a sustained reorganization of institutional life.
Oscar Agost Carreño, diputado cordobés que traicionó al PRO
The regrettable role of Agost Carreño
The appointment occurs in parallel with the resistance of Deputy Oscar Agost Carreño, who once again took the internal dispute to court in an attempt to block the intervention. His stance repeats previous actions with which he had already tried to disregard authorities and strain the party structure. The national leadership believes that his attitude prolonged an unnecessary crisis and weakened PRO's provincial projection.
Carreño deepened his isolation when he decided to compete with his own list, a move that ignored the strategy set by the organization at the national level. That gesture ultimately weakened PRO itself and benefited outside sectors, which caused discontent among Córdoba's electorate, who value internal coherence. While he portrays himself as a victim in the media, he avoids explaining why he repeatedly challenged organizational decisions that he himself had sworn to respect.
For national leaders, his narrative of persecution loses strength in the face of facts that show a clear disconnect between his actions and the party mandate. The calls for intervention arose as a direct consequence of his resistance to respect the institutional structure. The deputy, with rhetoric similar to that of Kirchnerism and with a term until 2027, will attempt to resist a new offensive against his weak local party leadership.