Eleccions 2019
Macri faced a rough Sunday, barely mitigated by the triumph in Jujuy
Cambiemos fell very short in Tucumán, Chubut, and Entre Ríos, and won in Mendoza, but Peronism drew near to Cornejo's candidate.

At the Casa Rosada, as has been happening in the previous provincial elections, they used electoral arithmetic to explain that Cambiemos didn't really lose votes compared to 2015. But creative mathematics hides the political fact in the background: the unity of Peronism and its confluence towards the Fernández-Fernández formula.

The photo from this Thursday is from the Entre Ríos election, where the Peronist Gustavo Bordet even managed to win in Paraná. Cambiemos now has lost another very important urban center, as has happened with the city of Córdoba, and all indications point to the same thing happening with the city of Santa Fe.

Macri's triumph in 2015 was built on three facts that today are in crisis: the division of Peronism thanks to the third list assembled by Sergio Massa -with its epicenter in the province of Buenos Aires-, plus the loose victory at the main urban centers of the country and a severe difference in the province of Córdoba.

The Peronist governors Juan Manzur (Tucumán), Mariano Arcioni (Chubut), and Gustavo Bordet (Entre Ríos) attained reelection this Sunday, and in one way or another initiated a process of confluence towards the formula of Alberto Fernández and Cristina Kirchner, which also moves in the same direction as Massa's movement.

In Chubut and Entre Ríos, they beat the Cambiemos candidates by more than 15 points, and in Tucumán, those close to Manzur talked of a hefty difference.

Macri was able to breathe easy in Jujuy, where the radical Gerardo Morales was reelected, and to a lesser extent in Mendoza, where the radical Rodolfo Suárez won in the primaries, though measured directly against Peronism, there was only an eight point difference. 

Publicar un comentario
Para enviar su comentario debe confirmar que ha leido y aceptado el reglamento de terminos y condiciones de LPO
Comentarios
Los comentarios publicados son de exclusiva responsabilidad de sus autores y las consecuencias derivadas de ellas pueden ser pasibles de las sanciones legales que correspondan. Aquel usuario que incluya en sus mensajes algun comentario violatorio del reglamento de terminos y condiciones será eliminado e inhabilitado para volver a comentar.
Más de English

The Centrao has already won‎

Por Marco Bastos
The Centrão is the bloc of conservative parties that has dominated Brazilian politics since the return to democracy in 1989. That bloc has been the hinge of the Brazilian political system, supporting all the Presidents of the young Brazilian democracy - both those on the left and on the right.‎
The LIBRE Initiative Believes Latinos will Define the Future of US Politics

The LIBRE Initiative Believes Latinos will Define the Future of US Politics

Por Lila Abed (Washington DC)
"I think that Governor DeSantis and Senator Marco Rubio will be reelected in 2022,", says Director of Public Affairs at The LIBRE Initiative, César Grajales.
Democrats should 'tell authentic stories' to reach Latinos, says former Bernie Sanders advisor

Democrats should 'tell authentic stories' to reach Latinos, says former Bernie Sanders advisor

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Junelle Cavero Harnal, a former advisor to Bernie Sanders and Head of Political at H Code, believes that an effort to explain why policies matter to Latino households will help the Democrats gain their support in upcoming elections.
"Latinos were undercounted in the Census," says expert.

"Latinos were undercounted in the Census," says expert.

Por Lila Abed (Washington DC)
"The Arizona legislature is trying to suppress the Latino vote because they see the trends that Latinos continue to gain more numbers and therefore more political clout," Joseph Garcia, Director of Public Affairs and International Relations at Chicanos Por La Causa (CPLC) .
Time to end 'dynastic politics' in the Bronx, council candidate says

Time to end 'dynastic politics' in the Bronx, council candidate says

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Marcos Sierra says that ending political dynasties from affluent areas of the borough will help attract new Latino and African American voters.
Meet Baltimore's first - and only - Latina city councilperson

Meet Baltimore's first - and only - Latina city councilperson

Por B. Debusmann (Washington DC)
Councilwoman Odette Ramos believes that the city's growing Latino population will become increasingly active in local politics.