For
mayors
throughout the country, including those in the Conurbano, management is (or should be) something like their seal of quality, which guarantees their survival or departure from office.
Horacio Rodríguez Larreta
himself
, mayor but of a city with provincial status, even tried to take that brand to the national level to achieve the presidential seat. For this reason, the
new survey
that
Clarín
accessed and evaluates the management of
24 communal chiefs of Greater Buenos Aires
is interesting and leaves a hot result:
8 of the PJ failed the exam
.
The study is from
Trespuntozero
, a consulting firm that has just gotten the first round election results and the runoff right. His last study focused on the Buenos Aires suburbs and included
400 to 800 cases per municipality
.
Clarín
advanced a part of the study. The one that evaluated the main national leaders in those parties. There was also a striking result there: for example, that Vice President Victoria Villarruel already measures in that historically Peronist region almost as well as Cristina Kirchner.
As explained in previous notes, in general local leaders such as mayors measure better than national leaders. But even with this plus, there were 8 community leaders who had
more rejections than support for their management
. In a ranking divided into three,
they were the ones that completed the table below
.
These are Gustavo Menéndez (Merlo), Mario Ishii (José C. Paz), Julián Alvarez (Lanús), Damián Selci (Hurlingham), Fernando Espinoza (La Matanza), Andrés Watson (Florencio Varela), Mayra Mendoza (Quilmes) and Federico Otermín (Lomas de Zamora).
When the consulting firm run by analyst Shila Vilker asked her neighbors how they saw the management, they responded like this:
Menéndez: 36% positive
(good / very good) and
63.5% negative
(bad / very bad).
Ishii: + 41.4% and - 57.2%.
Alvarez: + 41.7% and - 45.4%.
Selci: 43.1% and - 52.4%
.
Espinoza: + 43.5% and - 54%.
Watson: + 44.2% and - 49.5%.
Mendoza: + 44.8% and - 51.9%.
Otermín: + 46.2% and - 51.6%.
Those in the middle
The middle table already includes communal leaders from Together for Change, who are clearly a minority. These are
Soledad Martínez, Vicente López, and Ramón Lanús, from San Isidro
.
Jorge Macri's heir passes the management exam with
56.2% approval and 39% rejection
. While Patricia Bullrich's ally who broke the hegemony of the Posse combined
+ 55% and - 36.2%
.
The other six that complete the statistical "ham" are Peronists:
Mariel Fernández (Moreno): + 49% and - 48.9%.
Lucas Ghi (Morón): + 53.4% and - 44.2%.
Fernando Gray (Esteban Echeverría): + 55% and - 43.5%.
Fernando Moreira (San Martín): + 55.3% and - 38.3%.
Pablo Descalzo (Ituzaingó): + 55.7% and - 38.5%.
Mariano Cascallares (Almirante Brown): + 58.4% and - 39.6%.
The ones above
At the top of the ranking there is also
a partisan mix
, with the PJ/Unión por la Patria preeminent. The
exceptions
in this case are
Jaime Méndez
, a Peronist ally of Together for Change who manages
San Miguel,
and
Diego Valenzuela
, the Macrista who is serving his second term in
Tres de Febrero
.
Here everyone already has a number between very good and excellent:
Méndez combines + 69.8% and - 27.6%; and Valenzuela, + 60.3% and - 35.7%
.
The best is Juan Andreotti, from San Fernando, who exceeds 80 approval points (+ 82.2%) and combines them with just 17.5% rejection. The podium is completed by Gastón Granados (Ezeiza), with + 73.1% and - 25.9%; and the aforementioned Méndez.
The remaining ones are
Leonardo Nardini (Malvinas Argentinas, + 69.6% and - 26.2%)
;
Juan José Mussi (Berazategui, + 69.2% and - 25.6%)
;
Julio Zamora (Tigre, + 68.4% and - 27%)
; and
Jorge Ferraresi (Avellaneda, + 66.4% and - 32.4%)
.