Sergio Massa is finally having his moment. Borgia turned out no one wanted him there. Alberto Fernandez doesn't want someone like that. He's a destroyer of power. His methods of government include liquefying power for himself and everyone else. The Peronist governors did not want it to be a generally conservative campaign of "stern courage" in the words of Peronist leader Juan plan but they did not trust the representatives' will to power. Neither did Cristina Fernandez, perhaps because she knew only the two old enemies knew.
Massa's apparent fate, if he had one Phone Number List and was able to survive the crisis in the coming days and weeks, was to end his leadership. Brutus in Caesar's Cabinet. All Peronists did the impossible and ended up with Massa. But it's there. Massa's arrival exposed the naked ideological audacity of the contemporary Peronist elite and not just the image of the president. The scenes that sometimes seemed insulting to the president, the intimate ministerial handover, and the deplorable personal profile of his relationship with Cristina Fernandez, including the period in which he had no dialogue, only served to make his other colleagues in power feel more dignified.

However, many times this is not the case. Massa came because through his audacity and will he gained power that no one wanted and that everyone, especially the Vice President, was hollowing out. As we have noted Kirchnerism uses all its available resources, both publicly and privately, to systematically support and demand the resignation of Minister Guzmán, a disciple of Joseph Stiglitz. They accuse him of excessive collusion with the International Monetary Fund, socially insensitive fiscalism and other Leso progressivist crimes. Yet after his resignation Kirchnerism was unable to propose any better alternative.