Don't vote for me Argentina: election race wide open as political big
guns bow out
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[April 27, 2023]
By Nicolás Misculin
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina's three most recent presidents have
bowed out of the October general election campaign, throwing the race
wide open and the outcome in the balance, with the only sure candidate a
far-right libertarian who wants to dismantle the central bank.
Political uncertainty has roiled Argentina's already creaky financial
markets, with a run on the peso over the last week pushing it to record
lows in popular black markets. Inflation is 104.3% and nearly
one-in-four people is in poverty.
"It's a coin toss," Shila Vilker, director of pollster Trespuntozero
told Reuters about the race. "What we see is a lot of fragmentation in
what's on offer politically."
President Alberto Fernandez, whose popularity has tanked, last week
ruled out a run for reelection. His predecessor Mauricio Macri, one of
the leaders of the main opposition party, also will sit out this race.
Powerful Vice President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, a leftist who
sharply divides opinion but has a fervent hardcore support base, said in
December she would not run for anything in the 2023 election after being
found guilty of corruption.
The opposition coalition Together for Change remains in the driving
seat, polls show. But what had seemed a certain victory last year now
looks more hazy, with libertarian economist Javier Milei luring voters
from the mainstream left and right parties.
"There is an upward trend of voters who are very angry with politics who
are seemingly opting for this new force," said Facundo Nejamkis,
director of pollster Opina Argentina.
Vilker pegs Together for Change on a total 33% of the likely vote, the
ruling Peronist coalition on 28-29% and Milei on 24%. Opina estimates
31%, 26% and 23% respectively. Milei, though, tops the list for
individual candidates rather than parties.
"We represent an alternative of real transformation with respect to the
political cliques that have governed us for decades," Milei, who
proposes to dollarize the economy and eliminate the central bank, told
Reuters.
"We will beat any candidate who stands in front of us."
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A general view of the Casa Rosada
Presidential Palace and the Ministry of Economy building in Buenos
Aires, Argentina April 26, 2023. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian
CRISTINA FOR PRESIDENT?
Who that will be is up in the air, likely to be defined in August
primaries. The conservative opposition favorites are current Buenos
Aires city mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta and former security
minister Patricia Bullrich.
The Peronists, reeling from the economic crisis, are more divided
still. Potential runners are economy minister Sergio Massa,
political veteran Daniel Scioli and interior minister Eduardo De
Pedro. VP Kirchner could even pull off a shock return, with
supporters calling for her to run.
"We are putting all our hope in her," said Norma Varela during a
march in support of the VP in April where people carried banners
reading "Cristina for president".
"The poor want somebody who supports us and gives us hope."
Analyst Marcelo Rojas said the wide array of contenders was
impacting markets. "Potential candidates have very diverging plans,
from the dollarization of the right to the controls of the left," he
said.
Moderates such as Larreta, Massa or Scioli look strong bets to win a
potential head-to-head second round, if no candidate gets above 45%
in the first round. But they might fail in the primaries or the
general vote as more options split the vote.
A spokesman for Larreta said the candidate was confident moderate
voters would come out of the woodwork.
"They are a silent majority that we're betting on," he said.
A spokeswoman for the ruling coalition said things remained
"undefined". Other pre-candidates declined to comment.
On the streets of capital Buenos Aires, voter Raul Vazquez, was
downbeat regardless of whoever eventually won.
"All of them who come to power do the same – promises, promises. But
then, they forget about the people," he said. "I see a lot of people
in need in the streets, jobs are needed. They make a lot of plans
but don't do anything."
(Reporting by Nicolás Misculin; Additional reporting by Jorge Otaola
and Reuters TV; Editing by Lucila Sigal, Adam Jourdan and David
Gregorio)
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