Overview
- In her post, she wrote “El 10 de diciembre me quedo sin trabajo” and said she will not take any new political office after her mandate ends.
- The LinkedIn note followed her decision to reject running under the Pro–La Libertad Avanza alliance for the Oct. 26 legislative elections, which she warned could blur Pro’s identity.
- She recapped her background as governor and deputy and said that although she has taught, consulted and advised NGOs and international organizations, she has never been an employee inside a company.
- She asked contacts for leads and questioned whether employers are willing to hire someone moving from politics into a staff role.
- She highlighted skills from public service—team-building, allocating scarce resources, taking responsibility and applying methods to execute ideas—and noted she is 51 with a Political Science degree from UCA and teaching roles at UDESA and Di Tella.