Martín Llaryora, an ambitious dolphin

Martín Llaryora became a new threat within Peronism. Even his political godfather, the outgoing governor Juan Schiaretti, has to take care that his dauphin does not end up retiring. His intense career shows that over the last twenty years the curve has only gone up.

In 2003 he was elected to a San Francisco City Council. In 2007 he decided to run for inmates to be mayor, despite the fact that the current community chief had the support of then-governor José Manuel de la Sota, of whom he was also a friend. But the ambition of a thirty-year-old Llaryora was stronger and he decided to present himself anyway. He won. The next stop was in 2011, when he was re-elected and from there his dream for the governorship began to take shape.

De la Sota, with a nose to see those who come with a rush, summoned him to be Minister of Industry, but the mayor immediately expressed his ambition and they let him go. He spent a year and left to work on his campaign, but soon after he was summoned by Juan Schiaretti to accompany him as a candidate for lieutenant governor. He accepted and moved to Córdoba capital. In the 2017 legislative elections, he was first on the list of candidates for national deputy and although Peronism lost, Llaryora entered with the first minority. The place was insured from the moment he accepted.

Those two years in Buenos Aires were inconspicuous, because Llaryora had her eye on Córdoba, but it was going to be difficult to get the idea of ​​the governorship out of Schiaretti’s head, so He agreed to go as a candidate for mayor of the Cordovan capital, city ​​that he managed in the last four years. Now, this year, it was his turn. Two decades later.

Bell. Anyone who visits Córdoba will see that his face is all over the province. He has a strong investment in advertising and everything indicates that for the next four years he will launch the parallel project to consolidate himself as a potential presidential candidate.a sign that he already gave when traveling to Buenos Aires to give interviews when the votes were still being counted in his province.

Regarding his predecessor, he has already given signs of the place that he will give him for the future. “There is a generation that is retiring,” he said. Schiaretti has no right to complain. He already knew his ambition.

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