Politics Local 2025-12-14T22:26:22+00:00

Larroque: 'In Argentina, we must return to the future, because the future is Perón'

Minister Andrés Larroque called for updating the Peronist doctrine and supported Governor Axel Kicillof. At the event in Buenos Aires, he criticized internal factions and highlighted the growth of the political movement.


Larroque: 'In Argentina, we must return to the future, because the future is Perón'

The Minister of Community Development of the Province of Buenos Aires, Andrés 'Cuervo' Larroque, stated that 'in Argentina, we must return to the future, because the future is Perón, and Peronism is with Axel Kicillof.' He made these remarks at the year-end event for his movement, La Patria es el Otro (LPO), in Buenos Aires. At the center of the event is a call to update the Peronist doctrine, as Perón did in the 70s, under the name 'new songs.' Larroque also criticized some internal party groups, stating that 'there are no VIP areas or bracelets at this event,' and emphasized that 'the governor was re-elected by 20 points, but for some comrades, this is a problem.' Under a huge banner 'The future is with Axel,' he added, 'We don't feel important because of how many people we have under us in the structure. That's the behavior of a 'gorilla,' an oligarch.' The event was attended by provincial Minister Augusto Costa, Minister of Labor Walter Correa, legislator Berenice Iañez, former Minister of Labor Carlos Tomada, and former deputy and recovered granddaughter Victoria Montenegro. Augusto Costa noted that 'Axel represents a way of doing politics, a vision of the state, a way of governing and relating to his people,' and stressed that 'the slogan is clear: neither backward nor to the right. Right to the future and all with Axel.' Berenice Iañez, recently re-elected as a deputy, stated, 'Unlike many others, we know where we want to go and how we are going to get there. And this has a name, comrades, and it is called: Axel Kicillof president 2027.' Victoria Montenegro called for a return to the origins of Peronism and 'to return to the basics, to the most human thing, where our activism in dining rooms, schools, streets, and every place we inhabit matters.'