[7] Its name was adopted as a tribute to the Argentine popular political leader and First Lady Eva Perón.
[8] Other major figures of the movement are National Deputies Leonardo Grosso (former chairman of the Movement's in the lower house), the journalist Fernando "Chino" Navarro, Gildo Onorato, Silvia Horne, Remo Carlotto, Lucila De Ponti, and Araceli Ferreyra, former senators Juan Manuel Abal Medina Jr. and Teresita Luna, and Evita-UTEP liaison Esteban Castro.
[9] Now, it supports Alberto Fernández and is part of Frente de Todos, a new Peronist coalition.
One of the unusual characteristics of the Evita Movement is that its electoral secretary has lacked interest in holding political office.
And this generates a much more solid relationship of public policy [with the beneficiaries] that makes this process more difficult to reverse.