Silvia Lospennato and Mauricio Macri toured the city just days before the Buenos Aires City elections.

Just days before the Buenos Aires City elections ,Silvia Lospennato and Mauricio Macri were active in various campaign activities. The ruling party candidate for the Buenos Aires Primero list met with PRO activists in Commune 8, in the south of the city. The event was part of the closing campaign, which will conclude on Thursday in Villa Pueyrredón.
Lospennato was accompanied by Representative María Eugenia Vidal, her campaign manager, and the City's Minister of Health, Fernán Quirós. During the event, the legislator spoke with young people from the party and emphasized the importance of maintaining a "close and transparent" administration.
In parallel, former president and current head of the PRO national party, Mauricio Macri , led another meeting with candidates Darío Nieto and Rocío Figueroa. The meeting took place at the party's headquarters, where he met with young activists and shared his vision for the future of the organization.
PRO Youth? pic.twitter.com/TE1dBrjQLp
— PRO (@proargentina) May 13, 2025
Both activities seek to consolidate support for the ruling party in the Buenos Aires City elections, just days before the city's residents elect new legislative representatives. The closing ceremony will be held this Thursday at the Club 17 de Agosto, located in Villa Pueyrredón, at 7:00 p.m.
During his participation, Lospennato also responded to recent statements by President Javier Milei. The president had suggested the existence of a pact between Cristina Kirchner and Macri that would have impeded the advancement of the Clean Record project.
Lospennato called the statement "nonsense" and maintained that it "underestimates the intelligence of all Argentines." She also noted that she was the one who promoted the bill from its inception in Congress, and that it never received enough support to be approved.
"I feel very disappointed by what happened with Ficha Limpia," she stated. She also asked the president to reflect before making accusations without evidence. "With each assertion of this kind, it becomes less and less credible," she added in a televised statement.
The PRO party in Buenos Aires will seek to close this phase with a bang, strengthening direct contact with residents. The city elections will be held this Saturday, May 18, and will determine the immediate political future of the Buenos Aires ruling party.
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