In the television show that they share daily on A24, Eduardo Feinmann and Pablo Rossi debated this Wednesday the place that Cristina Kirchner occupies in the political construction ahead of the elections. For Feinmann, the former president retains a flow of between 20 and 25% of the votesbut its influence has clear limits: “I see it with veto power, not with finger power this time.”
The journalist was forceful when listing the leaders who, according to his analysis, have the support of CFK for a presidential candidacy: Wado De Pedro, Myriam Bregman and Juan Grabois. Rossi added Sergio Uñac, who also launched himself in the last hours.
The most resonant moment of the exchange came when Rossi proposed that Cristina would be capable of supporting Bregman – a leader of the Left Front – in order to complicate the life of Buenos Aires governor Axel Kicillof. Feinmann not only did not rule it out but stated it bluntly: “Don’t hesitate”.
According to the A24 driver, the former president “he wants Kicillof politically dead” and his anger overwhelms Peronism in general. “She considers that they left her alone and that no one takes care of her while she is locked up in house arrest,” Feinmann explained, and then went further in her diagnosis: “She is hated. It is a stage worse than resentment”.
Feinmann’s analysis is part of a scenario where Christianity faces its greatest internal fragmentation in years. With CFK serving his sentence in house arrest and without the possibility of running as a candidate, The dispute over the leadership of the opposition space occurs in a leadership vacuum that no one finishes filling..
Kicillof, who was the natural heir, was left at the center of the storm. Grabois, Wado and Bregman each orbit that void from different ideological places, which reflects the extent to which Kirchnerism ceased to be a bloc to become a series of dispersed bets that wait—or need—a signal that may not arrive.

