La Libertad Avanza Uruguay will open its first official headquarters in the country today, Tuesday. The inauguration ceremony is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the venue located at Cerro Largo 1833, corner of Arenal Grande, in the Cordón neighborhood of Montevideo.
The event will feature Chilean jurist and essayist Axel Kaiser as the main speaker. According to the organization, the day will include several activities and surprises for attendees, and it is open to all interested members of the public.
In less than a year since its founding, La Libertad Avanza Uruguay has achieved the following milestones:
- Collecting the necessary signatures to establish itself as a political party. - Obtaining final approval from the Electoral Court. - Acquiring and refurbishing a three-story building within 14 days. - Organizing Axel Kaiser's visit for the inauguration.
The group emphasized that all these advances were achieved exclusively through the contributions and voluntary work of its members and supporters, without external funding or state support.
With this headquarters, La Libertad Avanza Uruguay becomes the first right-wing political force with a formal physical presence in the country, consolidating its structure in preparation for future electoral processes.
To strengthen its libertarian identity and avoid the pitfalls of traditional parties, it would be ideal for La Libertad Avanza Uruguay to implement a system of open and transparent internal elections that allows all factions within it—such as the Libertarian Party and other like-minded groups—to compete democratically for candidacies.
Kaiser
Since there is no clear leadership in the libertarian movement as there was in Argentina with President Javier Milei, only in this way will it be ensured that the candidates genuinely represent the will of the grassroots and not decisions made by party elites.
It is also essential for the alliance to maintain its ideological independence and not, under any circumstances, join the Republican Coalition or any other multicolored bloc that would dilute its principles of individual freedom, free market, and minimal state.
The Argentine experience demonstrates that broad alliances end up betraying the votes of those seeking radical change and not merely cosmetic alternation in power.