According to a study by the consulting firm Reyes-Filadoro, only a third of the residents of the most populated district in the country feel satisfied in their job, 24% consider themselves "unemployed" and two thirds feel afraid of losing their source of income. during the next year.
Genesis, rise and crisis of a national being that frays, but resists. Conurbano: perception and expectations in the era of Javier Milei. Road to India. (LetraP)
Two-thirds of citizens are already finding life difficult in the province. The same percentage fears losing their jobs as debts continue to rise. Women are comparatively worse off.
The average libertarian voter chose him for his "strong personality." The comparison with Maradona and Nietzsche's theory to explain his popularity.
Argentine voters took a risk and the main tradicional parties paid a high cost. Caos and the need to rethink the limits and the role of the state.
Voters arrive at this election with a desire for change but also for stability. Sergio Massa´s presidential dream and a review of his path to the presidency.
Emotions play a key role in determining a voters decision.
Argentina´s problems are more ethical than economical but the answers will not come from a mesianic leader.
For a long time public opinion research has been showing a growing feeling of pesimism, sadness and resignation
President Alberto Fernandez is trying in vain to put an end to internal differences and rebelliion.
Massa will take on a new and central rol in the government from where he will try to pave the road to the presidency.
Internal differences inside the main political coalitions put their future at risk.
The lack of a precise strategy with the IMF puts Argentine´s economy in peril
Alberto Fernández seeks to reafirm his authority while Buenos Aires mayor, Horacio Rodriguez Larreta tries to position himself as the natural candidate fot the next presidential election
The author thinks the key of any political project lies in successfully aligning public opinion with the message.
MId term elections are over and every political space interprets the results as they think convenient.
Why Cristina Kirchner puts pressure on president Alberto Fernández to change his strategy?
A year after the Frente de Todos took charge of a country plagued by urgent issues and a deadly virus, the government has made very little progress in resolving the structural problems affecting the nation, but it has not lost the support of its voters.
The conflict over the opening of schools highlights the difficulty of the ruling party and the opposition in creating consensus.
Fernández is not, nor does he aspire to be, a charismatic leader who captivates the masses. Therefore, those expecting him to break with CFK will have to keep waiting.
How is the quarantine being experienced in the Conurbano, and what are people's greatest fears?
Although we are still far from witnessing the end of the "COVID-19" chapter in our history, significant changes in the social order are already visible.
For the first time in history, a global crisis is simultaneously affecting all the countries in the world, putting at risk not only the survival of a significant portion of the population but also the pillars upon which humanity is organized, imagined, and projected.
The small difference in votes with which Alberto Fernández sealed his victory in the first round forces the two main political coalitions in Argentina to maintain unity within their fronts to navigate the next stage.
Cristina Kirchner achieved her main objective: defeat Mauricio Macri at the polls to regain power. Three factors explain the victory of the Frente de Todos in this election: Macri's inability to lead the economy, the unity of Peronism and the strategic vision of the former president.