
The Governor of Buenos Aires Province, Axel KicillofLast Monday he made a political gesture. He is committed to leading the development of the Right to the Future Movement (MDF) at the national level. Although he explained that the plenary session in front of 1,500 members of the room was not the start of a candidacy or an election campaign, he called on “everyone to build a political force that goes beyond the province of Buenos Aires.” Who will be active in this strategy has been organized internally for some time.
Almost every week on Mondays at 12 p.m., the president gathers a group of mayors and executives in the Buenos Aires governorate in La Plata. The same names appear there: mayors and some provincial ministers of a more political nature. From there the MDF was designed must leave the borders of Buenos Aires Provinceafter this election year in which Peronism also coexisted and coexists with a strong internal party, for which Kicillof’s space is one of the active sectors in this discussion.

The truth is that the MDF political table has noted that some of its members From now on they will play a more active and politically prepared role for the future. both in the territory of Buenos Aires and in other non-Peronist provinces. Most of them are familiar names: the mayor of La Plata, Julio Alak; the former mayor of Florencio Varela and current director of Banco Provincia, Julio Pereyra; the former mayor of Ituzaingó, Alberto Barefoot and the outgoing Director General for Culture and Education, Alberto SileoniAccording to the findings, it is those who will bear political responsibility, especially in the Buenos Aires area Infobae.
There will also be some contacts with the provinces on behalf of this group. However, this role is left to some political ministers, such as: Andres “Cuervo” Larroque (community development); Carlos Bianco (Government) and the Chief of Ministerial Advisors, Cristina Alvarez Rodríguez. Bianco, for example, days ago received sectors of Peronism from Santa Fe in his office in the governor’s office.
Larroque accompanied Kicillof on his way through the province of Formosa, where the governor was named “guest of honor” by his counterpart. Gildo Insfran. The Minister of Security of Buenos Aires also took part in this activity. Javier Alonso. Both ministers were part of the cooperation agreements with the Province of Formosa. There the governor called for the creation of a “real pact” between the provinces.

On Monday, the governor chaired a plenary session of the MDF in which he clarified that it was not the start or commencement of an election campaign; but rather “build a national alternative to move Argentina forward.”
“We have come to call on everyone to build a political force that goes beyond the province of Buenos Aires. We will show that there is an alternative and that we are not prepared to repeat history. We have come to create a future: a different and better future for all people,” Kicillof had said that day. Sitting in the front row were some of those who have already started making contacts beyond the PBA.
The tours will not include Kicillof, at least in the short term. The president’s entourage admits that they want to avoid a premature election campaign. “It is not a two-year campaign, nor a candidacy, it is a construction, a vocation and a task that consists of presenting an alternative to Milei, in which society and sectors that today clearly distrust or have withdrawn can express themselves and participate,” emphasized the governor of Buenos Aires again this Wednesday in statements to Radio 10.
Kicillof wants to expand his construction and not limit it to Peronism. Some ministers acknowledge that there is a dialogue with other governors who have “moments of opposition” to the government Javier Milei; but what At the moment it is limited to this: conversations.
The public meetings that Kicillof had with other non-Peronist governors, such as Nacho Torres (Chubut) or Maximiliano Pullaro (Santa Fe), brought internal criticism; specifically from the industry referenced in Cristina Kirchner. The argument is that he did this without warning and “ignored” the reality of Peronism in these provinces. For now, Kicillof is sticking to the line with the anti-Milei governors, who alongside Insfrán in La Plata acknowledge that they are Sergio Zilliotto (The Pampas), Ricardo Quintela (Rioja), Gustavo Melella (Land of Fire) and Elias Suarez (Santiago del Estero).