Uruguay has yet to elect who will lead the Executive, but regardless of whether it opts for continuity or bets on change, the big game will be in the Legislative Palace.
The most interesting aspect of this electoral cycle is not the figures in competition, but what each one represents in terms of management models and vision of the country.
Looking ahead to the October election, the Frente Amplio has a voting intention of more than 40% in all opinion polls and, in most of them, it is above the sum of all parties comprising the government coalition.
Uruguay is experiencing the main political crisis since the restoration of democracy in 1985, and the trigger is so scandalous that for the serene and orderly country it sounds almost like fiction.