In the midst of the inmate that is eating away at Juntos por el Cambio and also at one of its most important members, the PRO, Mauricio Macri will meet this week with the head of the Buenos Aires Government, Horacio Rodríguez Larreta. The meeting will take place in the country Cumelén, in Villa La Angostura, where the former president is already installed.
The objective is to bring positions closer around some applications that find them at odds in several provinces and that add firewood to the already heated internal opposition coalition. Larreta maintains good relations with the Radical Civic Union (UCR), from where not a few darts have emerged against Macri and his presidential management that, by elevation, also falls on Patricia Bullrich.
In fact, The centennial party has already winked at a possible presidential formula with Larreta, which looks more difficult in the event that the PRO candidate is the former Minister of Security due to mutual revulsion. The radicals have made clear their aspirations to increase their presence and influence within an eventual government of Together for Change, after a management in which they had little or no participation in decision-making.
Macri Thus, he completes his conversations with the PRO presidential candidates who measure best in the polls, for which he first met with Bullrich, something logical if one takes into account their ideological affinity. As is known, they are united by the most extreme and conservative positions within that opposition coalition.
It remains to be seen if the meetings achieve the objective: lower the decibels of the open and veiled confrontation, attacking the fragile unity of a space that could become even more rarefied if the former president finally decides to look for a second chance.