The Somos Buenos Aires front closed the lists and added the mayors disenchanted with the PRO

Faced with the challenge of overcoming polarization, the "Somos Buenos Aires" party finalized its list of candidates for the Buenos Aires elections late Saturday: it presented its own names in all sections, added rebel mayors from the PRO party, and forged a last-minute agreement with the Passaglia brothers for the second electoral section.
The space was born from the initiative of Peronists such as Juan Schiaretti, Julio Zamora, and Florencio Randazzo; Martín Lousteau's UCR (United Left of the Radical Party); Elisa Carrió's Civic Coalition; and other centrist leaders such as Facundo Manes (who left the Radical Party) and national representative Emilio Monzó.
The split between the PRO mayors—who refused to reach an agreement with La Libertad Avanza just before the deadline—ended up fueling the party, which now presented its candidates with greater expectations than when the "anti-rift" campaign began months ago.
In the First Section - which this year became the most populous, displacing the Third, and which this year elects senators - the first candidate is the mayor of Tigre, Julio Zamora .
Despite the tensions , the front eventually reached an agreement with the Passaglia brothers from San Nicolás, the first to decide to break their alliance with the PRO party to compete with their own space: HECHOS. Also joining this section was the rebellion of Javier Martínez, a pure PRO party from Pergamino.
Given this situation, Somos Buenos Aires decided not to present its own list in this section, but will have its own candidate, a Radical Party member, in fourth place on the Passaglia party's ballot.
In the Third District, where Peronism is strong, the candidate will be the Radical Pablo Domenichini , provincial deputy and rector of the Guillermo Brown National University.
Hours before the closing, Junín Mayor Pablo Petrecca —also from the PRO party—announced that he would not be part of the agreement with LLA. He was immediately confirmed as the first candidate for first senator for the Fourth Section.
"More than ten years ago, we began a profound transformation in Junín. The change didn't start now: it's the result of years of management, effort, and commitment. And that deserves respect. And it deserves to be defended ," he tweeted, announcing his commitment to Somos Buenos Aires: "Together with all those who love Junín, we will continue building. Always on what we've already built. Always looking forward. Because that's who WE ARE. We are the ones who work every day, as always, so that Junín and the region continue to grow and improve."
Hopes for a successful election in the Fourth are growing with the participation of María José Gentile, also the mayor of the PRO party of 9 de Julio, and the participation of Guillermo Britos, mayor of Chivilcoy, within this group.
On the Sixth, the leader of the Civic Coalition, Andrés De Leo (former provincial senator), and on the Eighth, the radical Pablo Nicoletti, president of the UCR of La Plata.
The Fifth and Seventh sections (the least populated in the Province) were the last to be defined. Both sections elect senators, and the mayors had greater influence in choosing
Clarin