Patricia Bullrich he had been preparing his thesis all weekend. I knew that, in the previous one, I was not the darling of that business forum that generally favors the status quo and “moderation”, fashionable slogans in a red circle sector that Horacio Rodriguez Larretaanother of the exhibitors intends to appropriate it for the campaign.
But at the time of the votea simulation that Bariloche tried to tone down -“it’s a game”, assured-, the former Minister of Security and presidential candidate of PRO it was a broad winner: almost 50% of the votes of the entrepreneurs present are in favour.
This was the result of the vote – by show of hands, according to some, in writing, according to others – that the front-line businessmen who traveled to Llao Llao to participate in the restricted forum bearing the hotel’s name simulated towards the end of the summit, which took place between Monday and this Wednesday.
In addition to the two PRO candidates, former governor María Eugenia Vidal and libertarian Javier Milei also paraded there as the four main exhibitors of politics.
“It seems that the red circle has already started to love herr”, they gloated on this newspaper of Bullrich’s environment once the former minister had already landed in Buenos Aires and after the exhibition, centered on the concept of “order” and followed by a good number of confidential meetings with some of the entrepreneurs present.
According to reports, after the former minister, the preferences were for Rodríguez Larreta and, to a lesser extent, for Milei, whose growth in all polls worries and keeps the red circle on alert: The possibility that the head of Libertad Avanza has a hyper-competitive performance in the elections is a scenario that businessmen have in mind.
The famous “three thirds”, that is, elections divided between the opposition, the government party and libertarians, can be glimpsed in the most serious polls.
Bullrich, Milei and Rodríguez Larreta, in chronological order, exhibited at Llao Llao between Monday and Tuesday, and clarified their political intentions behind economic proposals.
Mauricio Macri’s former security minister’s speech focused on the idea of ”order”. By the way, this time with subtlety, he has tried to differentiate himself even more from Larreta, who is more identified with the management.
“This The Argentina that is coming is not solved only with the leadership. It is solved with a management that has leadership, who has firmness, who has courage and who has character. The concept that will govern our government will be the order concept“Bullrich defined. Economic order, for insecurity, for education, for health, for the state and the provinces.
True to his imprint, he returned to the fray on his usual bombastic terms. “We are going to overthrow the economic regime of the last 20 years”; “I know one by one the actors of the veto, those who are already preparing the knife between their teeth because we are a government that frustrates the expectations of change”; “But let’s blow up the interest regime that wears us out, in four years we will find ourselves repeating the same thing”; “It is a priority to dismantle exchange controls. Without making this decision, economic actors will not make theirs.”
Rodríguez Larreta instead opted for a more moderate discourse. “I come to put out the fire, not to light it. The violent in this new era will be obsolete,” was his cover letter. Perhaps to differentiate himself from the call to courage and strength of Milei and Bullrich, and he has repeatedly moved away from attitudes that he has defined “inconclusive bravado”.
Source: Clarin