The governor of Santa Fe, Maximiliano Pullaro, voted this Sunday at School No. 504 Domingo F. Sarmiento of Hughes, his hometown, and clearly marked his position regarding the legislative elections. “Today we begin to discuss a new, different Argentina, which will need dialogue and agreements to build lasting public policies,” said the president, a reference in the space. United Provinceswhich seeks to consolidate itself as a third way between national confrontation and institutional paralysis.
Pullaro stressed that this election day “is a very important day for the Republic and for the province of Santa Fe,” and highlighted the value of citizen participation as a sign of confidence in the democratic system. “All political spaces have already shown their proposals. Now is the time for society to speak and set the course for the country,” he said.
With an optimistic outlook, he anticipated a high turnout at the polls. “I think a lot of people are going to vote. In Santa Fe we saw how participation reached 80% when future projects were discussed. In this election, where it is debated what direction Argentina should take, there will also be a strong citizen commitment,” he stated.
“No one will have a majority: the time for consensus has arrived”
The Santa Fe governor stated that the result of the legislative elections will redefine the national political map. “Starting tomorrow, a new Argentina will begin to be discussed. Everything indicates that no one will have a legislative majority to impose their views. What is coming must be dialogue, consensus and reflection. There is no possible way out from imposition,” he warned.
In that sense, Pullaro highlighted the need for active federal representation. “United Provinces was born from the productive interior, from the experience of governing our provinces, to offer a different vision of the country. We want an Argentina that grows from its regions, that respects work, production and institutions,” he explained.
“A proposal with content, not slogans”
The president also valued the work of the lieutenant governor Gisela Scagliafirst candidate for national space deputy. “Gisela was very clear throughout the campaign. She spoke about the projects she was going to bring to Congress and the values we wanted to represent. It was a campaign with content, with concrete proposals, not with empty slogans,” he highlighted.
Pullaro also vindicated the tone of the legislative campaign in his province, which, unlike national polarization, maintained the focus on the debate of ideas. “Hopefully we can once again seriously discuss the public policies that the country needs. Today the people have the say; starting tomorrow, leaders must listen and build from that,” he reflected.
With a moderate but firm speech, Pullaro seeks to position himself as the voice of a modern and dialogic federalism, capable of influencing the institutional redesign anticipated by the new Congress. In his view, Santa Fe should not only be an economic protagonist of the country, but also a political one: “The Argentina that is coming is built from consensus, and Santa Fe is going to be part of that discussion.”
by RN

