Argentine rock-singing libertarian shakes up presidential election race
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[August 11, 2023]
By Anna-Catherine Brigida and Maximilian Heath
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina's presidential election race has an
unpredictable X factor: Javier Milei, a fiery and wild-haired
libertarian who wears leather jackets, belts out rock songs to his
supporters, and wants to purge politics of what he calls "thieves."
The 52-year-old economist, whose brash showmanship has shades of former
U.S. president Donald Trump or Italy's Beppe Grillo, has shot from
relative obscurity a few years ago to now polling at one-fifth of the
likely vote, with his combative, rock-style rallies appealing to voters
angry at 116% inflation and rising poverty.
He has pledged to "blow up" the political status quo, shutter the
central bank, dollarize the economy, and massively shrink the state -
ideas that have resonated with many voters, especially the young, after
years of economic decline.
"Milei is a phenomenon," said Benjamin Gedan, director of the Latin
America and Argentina programs at Washington-based think-tank the Wilson
Center, adding that his rise had rattled the two main political blocs.
"His plague-on-both-your-houses message resonates among voters fed up
with traditional political parties. And there are legions of these
voters."
Milei remains a long-shot to win the Oct. 22 general election, but has
turned it into a three-way race, challenging the ruling Peronist
coalition and the main conservative opposition grouping Together for
Change.
He is not facing an internal challenge in this Sunday's primary vote and
just needs to reach 1.5% to progress to the October contest. But the
result will give an indication of how deep his popularity is and how
much of a threat he may be in the general election.
Pollsters peg him at near 20% of the likely vote, a level of support
that could give his party significant sway in Congress and him the role
of king-maker in an eventual run-off between the two top candidates.
In his closing campaign event this week, Milei rocked into an arena,
singing and surrounded by cheering fans. He railed against the political
elite who he called "robbers" taking money out of voters' pockets.
"We are coming to defend against the looters of this system, which only
benefits the political thieves," he shouted at the joyful crowd as they
chanted "freedom, freedom," a reference to his party's name La Libertad
Avanza.
A former small-time rock musician and athlete, Milei opposes abortion
and supports gun rights. He has criticized worker-friendly labor laws as
a "cancer," said the state is the "basis of all problems," and praised
U.S. gangster Al Capone as a hero.
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Argentine presidential candidate Javier
Milei of La Libertad Avanza alliance, looks on during the closing
event of his electoral campaign ahead of the primaries, in Buenos
Aires, Argentina, August 7, 2023. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian/File
Photo
Milei's rise reflects a wider regional trend in recent years that
has seen Latin American politicians outside the mainstream and
pledging to break up the status quo gain prominence in Brazil,
Colombia, Peru and Chile.
"People are fed up with politicians," said Adriano Gabriel Zoccola,
a 31-year-old lawyer from Buenos Aires who supports Milei because of
his economic proposals and plans to slash government spending and
cut the number of ministries.
"If Argentina is going to have real change, something completely
different has to emerge. I think that Javier is the right person,"
added Zoccola, who said he had previously voted for Together for
Change.
Opponents say Milei's proposals are unrealistic. That includes the
plan to dollarize the economy, something most Argentines oppose
despite rapid depreciation of the peso currency and high inflation.
A dollar-peso peg introduced for similar reasons in the 1990s
brought short-term benefits but ended in an ugly devaluation.
Diana Mondino, an economist and adviser to Milei who is running for
Congress for his party, said his reputation for being unyielding was
the reason many people didn't like him but was also the very thing
that made him successful.
"He's not willing to negotiate," said Mondino. "He's willing to say:
'What do we need to get things done?' It might hurt, but it will get
done."
Gedan said Milei could pull off a shock result in the election, at
the very least shaking up the political panorama.
"In recent elections in Argentina, the two major coalitions gobbled
up almost all votes. Now, one-in-five voters will likely vote for
Milei - and he could do even better," Gedan said.
(Reporting by Anna-Catherine Brigida and Maximilian Heath; Editing
by Adam Jourdan and Rosalba O'Brien)
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