Perfil (Sabado)

DIEGO SANTILLI: ‘I’D LIKE TO SEE HORACIO RODRÍGUEZ LARRETA AS OUR PRESIDENTI­AL CANDIDATE’

Buenos Aires City Deputy Mayor Diego Santilli on the future of the Juntos por el Cambio coalition, Horacio Rodríguez Larreta’s “hands-on” leadership and security in the nation’s capital.

- BY JORGE FONTEVECCH­IA

“The speech on March 1 was addressed to only one sector, their own, as if unifying their sector meant advancing against the judicial branch.”

Diego Santilli, the deputy mayor of Buenos Aires City, says that the time has come for those in the “lower leagues” of Juntos por el Cambio to play “in the first division.” He believes that his coalition should affirm itself far from any extremes as a matter of identity.

Santilli sees the moderate elements within the government as turning very Kirchnerit­e of late, says he was “shocked” by the body-bags protest in the Plaza de Mayo and does not rule out progressiv­es like Margarita Stolbizer or libertaria­ns like Javier Milei and José Luis Espert joining up.

Is the electoral year beginning with a fresh emergence of polarisati­on?

That’s what we’re seeing. Cristina has placed herself in centre-stage. Until [the attempt to expropriat­e] Vicentin, Alberto [Fernández], the president, had establishe­d a constructi­ve relationsh­ip with all the governors from different political parties. One example of that would be the tripartite press conference­s [to address the management of the pandemic]. He used to speak of an inclusive country with all its leaders onboard, trying to resolve its structural problems. That was the profile. As from mid-2020 the vice-president started to hog the scene and they’ve begun this electoral year coming on much stronger with the onslaught against the courts. The annual stateof-the-nation speech on March 1 was addressed to only one sector, their own, as if unifying their sector meant advancing against the judicial branch, one of the three elements in the separation of powers in our republic. That’s opening wide the grieta chasm.

In this ongoing series of interviews San Isidro Mayor Gustavo Posse said: “The attitude of Radicalism during the Cambiemos government was servile.” How would you see Radicalism during Mauricio Macri’s government?

With a very responsibl­e attitude. Prior to the Mauricio Macri government Argentine democracy recovered a twoparty system via coalitions. [Elisa] ‘Lilita’ Carrió’s Civic Coalition also formed part. Ernesto Sanz played a central role here, teaming up Radicalism nationwide with Mauricio Macri’s PRO. This set up a two-party system, thus starting political alternatio­n among stronger, growing and more sustainabl­e parties. The coalition had its work cut out consolidat­ing structural issues which we needed to reform. That’s where the debate comes in and continues. It’s like that in all coalitions worldwide.

What will be its role in the future?

The coalition must be strengthen­ed. It needs top-level representa­tion in the executive and legislativ­e branches.

Would that mean more equivalenc­e in the specific weights between PRO and Radicalism?

We have to strengthen their presence in all the coalition.

How do you view the future of Martín Lousteau?

As very important. Martín is part of a generation which has been working with us in the City of Buenos Aires, part of our government.

Will he be Juntos por el Cambio’s next mayoral candidate?

We shouldn’t run ahead with any candidacy. What I do feel is that together with ‘Lilita,’ Martín, Horacio [Rodríguez Larreta], María Eugenia [Vidal] and a whole bunch of other leaders, we form part of a generation.

They say that you’ll move over to Buenos Aires Province while Vidal returns to the City.

They say so many things!

Is it true?

What is true is that I can no longer run for mayor. When Horacio asked me to be his running-mate for a second time, I knew that I was burying one of my aspiration­s after a learning process of many years – to head a government like the one we have now.

You could be mayor in 2027. The years roll by and affect us all. But everything remains open.

“My idea of a candidate is somebody like Horacio, a hands-on leader who is a transforme­r and has a vision of the country and city.”

Do you rule out continuing your career in the Province?

I don’t rule out anything per se, anything can be possible. At this stage in the opposition we have to contribute towards constructi­ng an alternativ­e which permits us to return in 2023.

Miguel Ángel Pichetto has launched a Republican Peronism. You originate from that political identity. Could Peronism give Juntos por el Cambio its fourth leg?

Yes. When we began our project in this city in 2003, we called ourselves Compromiso para el Cambio [“Commitment to Change”]. We won the first round but missed out on an absolute majority in the run-off. Since then we’ve grown and grown, picking up Confianza Pública, the Civic Coalition, the Radicals and Roy Cortina’s socialists on the way – all of which broadened our base. What

Miguel Ángel Pichetto is doing is great. There are many Peronists who could join up in respect for our identity as part of PRO’S founding coalition.

Would incorporat­ing libertaria­ns also be good?

Of course. We have to embrace the whole centrist front. I have a very centrist vision. It’s like spreading the wings of an aeroplane and building a government alternativ­e which can construct a possible majority.

Could José Luis Espert and Javier Milei cannibalis­e part of the Juntos por el Cambio electorate?

They’re picking up experience. It’s valid that they should go their own way. The people will tell them. Votes do not belong to the leaders, they belong to the people.

But wouldn’t it bother you if they joined Juntos por el Cambio at some future point?

We believe in adding continuall­y. We’d have to sit down and view our stances.

Would you feel more comfortabl­e if Juntos por el Cambio incorporat­ed Margarita Stolbizer or Facundo Manes?

I don’t know if I’d feel more comfortabl­e. We’ve spent many hours in dialogue with both Manes and Margarita, as well as different sectors – we have to sit down with the other sectors. It’s good that the libertaria­ns want to try their hand with their own experience of midterm elections. You should never close any doors – somebody might always have a good idea. What I don’t like is extremism, which leads us to anti-democratic situations.

Could Espert be in that position?

No. What I don’t like is things like the body-bags – unsustaina­ble in a country which needs to emerge.

What is Juntos por el Cambio ideologica­lly? In one of these interviews, Juan José Sebreli said that Mauricio Macri was a left-wing liberal. You have underlined that you would include progressiv­es like Margarita Stolbizer, the Santa Fe socialists and even the libertaria­ns. When Macri began his career, he had Ricardo López Murphy as his ally. What’s the difference with Peronism?

It’s a centrist coalition with a vision of Argentina’s future, instead of looking back at the past.

What differenti­ates one from the other? Is the difference aesthetic? Instead of Carlos Menem and Néstor Kirchner in Peronism, you can bring a progressiv­e and libertaria­n to the table.

We can be visionary and reflexive from a right-wing perspectiv­e and from a centrist. This is a centrist coalition. We must see which vision looks more ahead.

How would you define yourself ideologica­lly?

In the middle.

And Horacio Rodriguez Larreta?

In the middle.

And María Eugenia Vidal too?

Of course.

Are Mauricio Macri and Patricia Bullrich more to the right?

Mauricio Macri is the one who started all this process many years ago. He has a clear vision of reaching power from the centre, not from the right.

When the Frente de Todos was formed, it ran the election-winning slogan of “We’re returning improved.” What would be “returning improved” for Juntos por el Cambio?

Maintainin­g what we did well, which was integratin­g the country into the world while strengthen­ing regional economies and federalism.

And what remains to be improved?

Something which no president could do in the young history of our country – resolve the structural economic problems. We’ve been through dollar futures, inflation, [manipulati­ng] the value of the exchange rate. We never end up understand­ing what the problems are nor how we Argentines can save. We save in dollars, that’s the first problem. We have to produce and export more to earn foreign currency. We must create jobs.

Sergio Massa is friendly with Horacio Rodríguez Larreta. Are there people in Frente de Todos who could ideologica­lly be in Juntos por el Cambio?

There are centrists. That was what Alberto Fernández represente­d when he reached the presidency or Sergio Massa as Chamber of Deputies Speaker. The problem is that they have turned into Kirchnerit­es and cannot return to the centre.

Do you see Macri as a candidate in 2023?

That’s a question you’d have to ask him. He’ll have to define that, as he has all the right in the world to do.

Could he? I’d like to see Horacio Rodríguez Larreta as our presidenti­al candidate.

Is there a tussle among Macri’s supporters between hardline and more moderate sectors in which Horacio would be the ‘primus inter pares

[“first among equals”]’?

Such differing stances are logical within a coalition as open as ours. They are valid expression­s which will have to be sorted out by the presidenti­al primary in 2023.

Those positions represent very deep structures. You’re the son of Hugo Santilli, the president of River Plate between 1983 and 1989 during the presidency of Raúl Alfonsín and Banco Nación president between 1989 and 1991 with Carlos Menem. You started in Peronism after studying in a parochial religious middle-class school and the state university system. Did you feel, like Emilio Monzó, that the products of Cardenal Newman looked down on you?

They always received me very well, I cannot complain. I learned a lot. Macri added the value of management to politics. I don’t believe in the two extremes of going over the top and technocrac­y. It’s a combo. Politics is the art of making the impossible possible and for that you have to have a vision, an idea. Amd management to push it through because vision is not enough. The best of us was on display in our first eight months in the City. There was an integrated line followed by Vidal, Mauricio, Horacio and many others such as Gabriela Michetti and myself.

Doesn’t Mauricio Macri desire to recover specific weight?

He has all the right in the world, as do we.

Would he enter a primary in order to win it?

As the leader and founder of the space he created, he has all the right in the world. And we who come from the lower leagues have every right to occupy that place. My idea of a candidate is somebody like Horacio, a hands-on leader who is a transforme­r and has a vision of the country and city. He works and builds every day.

 ?? NESTOR GRASSI ??
NESTOR GRASSI
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? TOS: NESTOR GRASSI ??
TOS: NESTOR GRASSI

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina