Post by account_disabled on Mar 7, 2024 6:45:42 GMT -4
And In This Case, All Existing Sectors (Kirchnerism, Albertism and Massism) Would Agree to Settle the Leadership in Internal Elections, Whether Open, Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries ( Step ) or Another Type. This Option Would Imply an Effort to Get Out of the Current Impasse by Betting on Transforming Peronism Into the Type of "Bureaucratized" Party That, Until Now, It Never Was. Such a Thing Seems Unlikely Today, Because Whoever Loses is Also Automatically Out of Competition for the Presidency.
Alberto Fernández Said That He Would Promote This Path (With Him as a Competitor), but Agreements Seem Very Unlikely. The Second Scenario Would Be That Alberto Fernández Decided to Break With Kirchnerism, Just as Néstor Kirchner Did With Eduardo Duhalde UK Mobile Database in , and Finally Built "Albertism." There is No Doubt That There Are Actors Close to the President Who Advise Him to Follow This Path, but Fernández Himself Seems . Would He Win if He Did It? It is True That He Would Have the Support of Some Unions, Some Governors and Mayors, Perhaps Social Movements and Perhaps Even Some Businessmen.
But Néstor Kirchner Challenged Duhalde at a Time of a Rising Economy and After Having Accumulated Great Popularity. Neither of These Two Conditions Exists Today, Both Due to Factors Beyond the Government's Control and Due to Self-inflicted Errors (Such as the Meeting at the Presidential Residence to Celebrate the First Lady's Birthday in the Middle of the Quarantine). The Third Scenario Would Be for Kirchnerism to Denounce the Government and Definitively Break With It. Such a Thing is Not Impossible, and May Even Be Inevitable.
Alberto Fernández Said That He Would Promote This Path (With Him as a Competitor), but Agreements Seem Very Unlikely. The Second Scenario Would Be That Alberto Fernández Decided to Break With Kirchnerism, Just as Néstor Kirchner Did With Eduardo Duhalde UK Mobile Database in , and Finally Built "Albertism." There is No Doubt That There Are Actors Close to the President Who Advise Him to Follow This Path, but Fernández Himself Seems . Would He Win if He Did It? It is True That He Would Have the Support of Some Unions, Some Governors and Mayors, Perhaps Social Movements and Perhaps Even Some Businessmen.
But Néstor Kirchner Challenged Duhalde at a Time of a Rising Economy and After Having Accumulated Great Popularity. Neither of These Two Conditions Exists Today, Both Due to Factors Beyond the Government's Control and Due to Self-inflicted Errors (Such as the Meeting at the Presidential Residence to Celebrate the First Lady's Birthday in the Middle of the Quarantine). The Third Scenario Would Be for Kirchnerism to Denounce the Government and Definitively Break With It. Such a Thing is Not Impossible, and May Even Be Inevitable.