It seems that in Kirchnerism never lacks a threadbut this time the main dish is served cold and family. Máximo Kirchner and her mother, former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchnerthey star in a subtle (or not so much) pull the control of Peronism. And in the center of the storm is Axel KicillofCristina’s former dolphin who is now outlined as a fish that Threat with swimming out of camorista fishbowl.
The debate for the elimination of the passage revealed that mother and son do not always match the strategy. Cristina seeks Keep primary to contain Kicillof inside the PJ and prevent it from playing loose. Máximo, on the other hand, prefers to dynamit the way and close the door of the party, and to warn other governors. As in any family dynamic, the disagreement is not said straight in front, but it feels.
And meanwhile, Peronist governors look at the scene with a mixture of intrigue and joy: Where there is a void of power, there is always someone willing to fill it. That path launched the Rioja a few months ago Ricardo Quintela To seek the presidency of the PJ, inciting Kicillof to break with CFK, after suffering in recent years the criticism and questions of La Cámpora.
The first meeting of the year of Union deputies for the country showed the internal crack. There was no agreement on how to face the government’s electoral reform, and the solution was the classic “if we cannot decide, we better not play”: They chose not quorum. In that context, Cristina sent Leopoldo Moreau to mark the court in her name, defending the step and criticizing the libertarian play. Meanwhile, Máximo and his camper troop listened in silence, as who complies with a reluctant order. The son who crouched his head and continues under his mother’s umbrella.
But the thread is not limited to the family table. The Peronist governors, who have been having the possibility of taking off from Kirchnerism, took advantage of the weakness of the K conduction to open their own game. Some, such as Gerardo Zamora and Raúl Jalil, already gave signs that they could support the elimination of the Paso, facilitating the Milei government play. Guillermo Francos, chief of cabinet, made it clear: there is a leadership dispute in Peronism and several legislators are ready to give the final push to the primaries.
Kicillof, meanwhile, plays his own game. The possibility of unfolding elections in the province is a clear message: its loyalty with Kirchnerism is not unconditional. Cristina’s idea of a controlled intern to neutralize it could become a double -edged sword. And if something makes something inmate, it is that, while Máximo and Cristina try to discipline the governor, he is already rehearsing his own flight.
In short, The Peronist policy remains a tangle soap opera with characters that seek to consolidate their power in an increasingly fragmented scenario. And in the middle, mother and son try to decide whether to play together or in different teams. The truth is that, with or without step, internal rain in Kirchnerism continues to fall on wet.
By rn

