The vice presidential candidate for the Frente Amplio, Carolina, voted #Cosse. «I think it has to be a bright day for the #democracy«he assured. 📺Inform @VirnaCastelli 🗳️#Elections2024 pic.twitter.com/jBgWBahDco
— Channel 5 News (@5noticiasuy) October 27, 2024
The candidate for vice president for the National Party, Carolina Cossecast his vote this morning at 9:53, after entering the voting precinct with difficulty because he was with a crutch that helps him walk after suffering a sprained foot.
After depositing the envelope in the container, he began by saying that this day must be “a bright day for democracy” by highlighting that public officials of the Electoral Court and all the people at the voting station were essential for the correct passage of the day.
“I want to send a hug to the militants, who I know were running from here to there until late at night handing out lists, and I know that today they are also handing out lists,” said the former mayor of Montevideo.
“Today is the moment in which democracy is expressed in all its fullness,” added Cosse, who has also been a senator, Minister of Industry and president of Antel.
He continued by reinforcing the work of the Frente Amplio militancy: “I feel a climate of many militants working in the streets, I feel that climate of activity and commitment until the end, which excites me very much and makes me happy for Uruguay.”
Voting on behalf of his father
Asked about how she experienced the campaign, she reflected: “I lived the campaign with great intensity after having toured the interior since 2019, in the internal ones. I experienced it with a lot of affection, a lot of hugs, a lot of love, and a lot of desire to be part of the solution, and that is what makes me proud of being Uruguayan.”
His father Villanueva Félix Cosse Vega, who has lived in Buenos Aires since 1971, could not travel on this occasion to cast his vote. “My father always came to vote, and like him, many Uruguayans from other parts of the world have always come, to whom I want to send a hug (to those who) could not come because when Uruguayans leave the country we do not stop being compatriots. ”