The governor honored the former president 14 years after his death and took the opportunity to once again ask for “unity” in the Justicialist Party while avoiding speaking out for the candidates.
The governor of the province of Buenos Aires, Axel Kicillof, He remembered the former president this Sunday on his social network account X Nestor Carlos Kirchnerupon completion 14 years after his death and, in the midst of the internal PJ facing the national elections of the Justicialista Party, he sent a message within Peronism: “We have the obligation to continue working in unity”.
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“Néstor started a political project that transformed the reality of millions of Argentinians. In a time where everything conquered is once again at risk, we have the obligation to continue working in unity to articulate responses that embrace our people,” was the complete message from the Buenos Aires chief.


The tweet is the first Kicillof demonstration after a few days of silence in the midst of the internal struggle of the Justicialist Party over the leadership of the party.
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Axel Kicillof was interviewed by the Financial Times: what he said about Cristina Kirchner and Javier Milei
Axel Kicillof was close to Cristina Kirchner last Wednesday, but with little contact. In this context, Kicillof spoke with the traditional English newspaper Financial Times. The Buenos Aires governor was characterized by the British media as the “most influential elected official within the left-wing Peronist opposition.”
In the midst of the internal PJ, Kicillof said that his relationship with Fernández de Kirchner is “permanent” and that the conversations with the former president “depend on the moment,” despite the obvious tension that existed between the two during the Abuelas event in The Silver.
Meanwhile, in relation to the party dispute in Peronism, he limited himself to stating that the opposition space is in “a process of analysis and reorganization.”
He also spoke about Milei and stated that, “although he won the elections,” nothing he said “represents the ideas deeply rooted in Argentine society or any sudden change in the cultural and historical values of the Argentine people.”
Source: Ambito

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