Javier
Milei embroiled in corruption scandal tying his sister to alleged bribes
Leaked
audio links Karina Milei, sister of Argentina’s president, to alleged bribes
involving drug contracts for medicines for disabled people
Tiago
Rogero in Rio de Janeiro and Facundo Iglesia in Buenos Aires
Wed 27
Aug 2025 14.14 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/27/javier-milei-sister-argentina-alleged-kickbacks
Argentina’s
president Javier Milei is facing his administration’s worst alleged corruption
scandal – involving none other than his hugely influential sister, Karina –
less than two months before key legislative elections.
For more
than a week, news in the country has been dominated by audio recordings in
which a former government official is heard discussing the alleged payment of
bribes linked to the purchase of medicines for people with disabilities.
In the
recordings, Diego Spagnuolo, the head of the National Disability Agency and a
former Milei lawyer, claimed that the sister of the self-styled
anarcho-capitalist allegedly pocketed 3% from each contract.
Spagnuolo
initially denied it was him in the tapes, but later admitted it and was
dismissed by the government after the furore.
After
days of silence, Milei appeared alongside his sister – an influential figure in
his administration – at a campaign rally, asking the crowd to give her a “big
ovation”.
After a
summer in which the wild-haired president was celebrated even by the British
right, political analysts in Argentina see the case as the most damaging blow
yet to Milei.
“It’s the
biggest scandal his administration has faced,” said Juan Courel, an expert in
political communication from Alaska Comunicación.
The
scandal first emerged on 19 August, when the streaming channel Carnaval
released the first audio recordings, the source of which is still unknown.
In the
recordings, Spagnuolo claimed the alleged scheme was channelled through the
pharmaceutical firm Suizo Argentina, which allegedly demanded 8% kickbacks from
other companies seeking government contracts.
The
scheme reportedly generated between $500,000 and $800,000 per month in bribes,
with 3% of that amount allegedly going to Milei’s sister, Karina, who is the
secretary general of the presidency – a role she was able to assume because
Milei scrapped a decree barring relatives from public office.
Spagnuolo
also said he had warned the president about the supposed fraudulent dealings:
“I said to him: ‘Javier, you know they are stealing, that your sister is
stealing’.”
As the
scandal spread, lawyer Gregorio Dalbón filed a criminal complaint against
Milei, Karina, Spagnuolo and others named in the recordings. Dalbón has
represented former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner – Milei’s main
political adversary who was herself banned from politics for life and put under
house arrest in June after the supreme court upheld a six-year sentence for
corruption.
Dalbón
described the allegations against Milei’s government as “the greatest
corruption scandal since democracy was restored in 1983”, adding: “I don’t rule
out that this could be this government’s Watergate.”
A federal
judge ordered an investigation and police raids at dozens of addresses. At the
home of one of Suizo Argentina’s owners, $266,000 in cash was seized.
During a
campaign event last Saturday, Karina did not mention the case directly, but
said: “We are ready to fight, to keep watch so they [the opposition] don’t
steal from us any more.”
The
president also avoided addressing the case directly, but reposted on his social
media a statement from Suizo Argentina, in which the company said it was “fully
available” to the courts to “clarify the facts under investigation, fully
convinced it had acted in complete compliance with current rules and laws”.
Opposition
lawmakers filed a motion to establish an investigative commission to probe the
corruption allegations. “So far, there have been no convincing explanations
about what happened,” said Esteban Paulón, the socialist deputy who introduced
the bill. “And that is serious because it undermines the government’s
credibility.”
On 26
October, Milei will face his first midterm election, with half the seats in the
lower house and a third of the senate up for grabs.
According
to Lara Goyburu, a political scientist and executive director at the consulting
firm Management & Fit, the scandal could affect voter turnout and poses a
greater risk to Milei than the cryptocurrency debacle.
In
February, the president promoted an obscure token called $LIBRA, which soared
in value after his endorsement before collapsing, prompting dozens of criminal
complaints alleging fraud.
Goyburu
said the “audio scandal” resonates more with the public because it occurred “in
an organisation that works with a vulnerable sector of the population” and
because it appears closer to the “old-fashioned corruption” Milei had promised
to fight.
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