Survey: Larreta with a wide advantage in the PASO of Together for Change

Horacio Rodriguez Larreta would prevail within the Juntos por el Cambio with the 21.4% of the intention to vote, well ahead of Patricia Bullrich with the 9.7%and very far from Mary Eugenia Vidalwhich would get the 4.6%ahead of Jose Luis Espert with 2.6%, already Facundo Manes with 2.9%, where a large majority have not yet defined positions.

The Buenos Aires head of government is, according to the report by the consultancy M&F, the national leader with the greatest electoral potential towards the presidential elections: he heads the list on voting intention with a ceiling that rises to 40.4%.

The referent of Freedom Advances, javier mileiwould prevail, however, in all STEP scenarios, be it Cristina Kirchner, Sergio Massa or Alberto Fernández the candidates of the Frente de Todos, and regardless of who competes for the space of the non-Kirchnerist federal Peronism, it is Juan from Salta Manuel Urtubey or the Cordovan governor Juan Schiaretti.

Pedro’s “Wado” would not exceed 6.3% of the votes, even with the endorsement of Vice President Cristina Kirchner, but Sergio Massa could match the votes that the former president would get if she competed again for the Rivadavia seat: both would retain 17.8% of the votes in the PASO and would rank as a third force. In all scenarios the candidate of the Left Front, Miriam Bregman, oscillates with very little difference between 3.8 and 4.5%.

In the province of Buenos Aires, the governor Axel Kicillof appears as a solid candidate for re-election with 29.8% of the votes, while Diego Santilli is the one who best measures within the opposition coalition with 24.3%, six points ahead of Christian Ritondo who could, according to the M&F opinion study, even be third behind the candidate for Buenos Aires governor presented by Javier Milei.

59% of those surveyed believe that the change that the country needs is total, while 37.7% believe that some things must be changed and others maintained. Only 1.8% of those surveyed believe that Argentina does not need changes. The majority of those consulted (22.2%) assured that they “would like” the next president to be from Together for Change. The M&F survey was carried out in person between February 27 and April 13 throughout the country (1,500 cases).

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