Far-Right
Libertarian Wins Argentina’s Presidential Primary
Javier
Milei, who wants to abolish the central bank and adopt the U.S. dollar as
Argentina’s currency, is now the front-runner in the fall general election.
By Jack
NicasNatalie Alcoba and Lucía Cholakian Herrera
Reporting
from Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/14/world/americas/argentina-javier-milei-president-primary.html
Aug. 14,
2023
A
far-right libertarian candidate won Argentina’s open presidential primary
election on Sunday, a surprising showing for a politician who wants to adopt
the U.S. dollar as Argentina’s official currency and embraces comparisons to
Donald Trump.
Javier
Milei, 52, a congressman, economist and former television pundit, secured 30
percent of the vote with 96 percent of the ballots counted, making him the
front-runner for the presidency in the fall general election.
Polls had
suggested that Mr. Milei’s support was at about 20 percent, and political
analysts had predicted that his radical policy proposals — including abolishing
the country’s central bank — would prevent him from attracting many more
voters.
But the
vote on Sunday made clear that Mr. Milei now has a clear shot at leading
Argentina, a South American nation of 46 million with some of the world’s
largest reserves of oil, gas and lithium.
“I think
these results are surprising even to him,” said Pablo Touzon, an Argentine
political consultant. “Up until now, he was a protest candidate.”
Argentina’s
general election in October, which could go to a November runoff, will now
become a new test of the strength of the far right around the world. Although
hard-right forces have gained new influence in several powerful nations in
recent years, including the United States, Germany, France, Italy, Sweden and
Finland, they have also suffered some defeats, including in Spain and Brazil.
Mr. Milei
has pitched himself as the radical change that the collapsing Argentine economy
needs, and he could be a shock to the system if elected. Besides his ideas
about the currency and the central bank, he has proposed drastically lowering
taxes and cutting public spending, including by charging people to use the
public health care system; closing or privatizing all state-owned enterprises;
and eliminating the health, education and environment ministries.
Sergio
Massa, Argentina’s center-left finance minister, finished second in the
primary, with 21 percent of the vote. Patricia Bullrich, a conservative former
security minister, finished in third place, with 17 percent.
The
general election takes place on Oct. 22, but it appears likely that the race
will be decided in a runoff vote on Nov. 19.
The
Sunday results showed that Argentina’s three separate coalitions have similar
levels of support, making it unlikely that any candidate will reach or exceed
the 45-percent threshold necessary to win outright in the first round. (A
candidate can also win outright by winning 40 percent of the vote with a margin
of victory of at least 10 percentage points.)
The
center-right coalition’s candidates received a combined 28 percent of the vote
on Sunday, while the center-left coalition received 27 percent — both slightly
less than Mr. Milei’s total.
The
incumbent center-left party has held power in Argentina for 16 of the past 20
years and has been controlled largely by former President Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner.
“We’re
not only going to end Kirchnerism, but we’re also going to end the useless,
parasitic, criminal political caste that is sinking this country,” Mr. Milei
told supporters in a speech on Sunday night. He then thanked his sister, who
runs his campaign, and his five Mastiff dogs, each named after a conservative
economist.
Argentina,
which has weathered economic crises for decades, is in the midst of one of its
worst. The Argentine peso has plummeted in value, annual inflation has
surpassed 115 percent, nearly 40 percent of the population is impoverished and
the country is struggling to repay its $44 billion debt to the International
Monetary Fund.
Mr. Milei
has said that his economic policies would represent an austerity package that
goes beyond even what the I.M.F. is requesting of Argentina.
He could
also have a profound effect on other parts of Argentine society. He and his
running mate, a lawyer who has defended the country’s past military
dictatorship, have suggested they would loosen gun laws, reverse recent
policies allowing abortion and even permit the sale of human organs, an example
of commerce that Mr. Milei says the government has no business restricting.
Yet
implementing such changes would lead to a major challenge. Sunday’s results
suggested that Mr. Milei, if elected, would have limited direct support in
Congress. His party, called Liberty Advances, said it would control just 8 of
the 72 seats in the Senate and 35 of the 257 seats in the House, according to
the results for its other candidates.
Mr.
Touzon said Mr. Milei would have less institutional support than far-right
candidates who were swept into office elsewhere in recent years, including Mr.
Trump and former President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil. “Bolsonaro leaned on the
army. Trump had the Republican Party. Milei has nothing,” he said.
He added
that Mr. Milei’s economic plan, while radical, is lacking in details and has
been revised frequently. “His dollarization plan was changed 50 times,” Mr.
Touzon said. “Today, he does not have a team to govern Argentina.”
Yet Mr.
Milei has proved to be a skilled politician in the internet age, with a
trademark scowl and head of unruly hair that have given him a larger-than-life
persona and made him an easy subject of internet memes, much like Mr. Trump and
Mr. Bolsonaro.
In a
public video posted online ahead of the vote, Mr. Bolsonaro endorsed Mr. Milei
and said they were political kindred spirits. “We have a lot of things in
common,” he said, citing what he called their support for private property,
freedom of expression, the free market and the right to self-defense.
And not
unlike supporters of Mr. Trump and Mr. Bolsonaro, Argentines who voted for Mr.
Milei said on Sunday that they liked him because he was a political outsider
who would shake up a broken system and tell it like it is.
“The
Argentine people have finally woken up,” said Rebeca Di Iorio, 44, an
administrative worker celebrating at Mr. Milei’s election-night street party in
Buenos Aires. “Argentina needs that. It needs a change.”
Santiago
Manoukian, research chief of Ecolatina, an Argentine economic consulting firm,
said that of the different scenarios for primary results that analysts had
mapped out, Mr. Milei’s victory was the least expected.
Now Mr.
Manoukian said he would have to rethink his predictions of the election, as Mr.
Milei has a clear chance to reach the second round, which then could be a
tossup.
“He was
not seen as a competitive candidate for a runoff,” Mr. Manoukian said. “Now
something very different is happening.”
Corrections
were made on Aug. 14, 2023: An earlier version of this article misstated the
number of seats in Argentina’s lower house of Congress. It has 257 seats, not
500.
An
earlier version of this article misidentified how a candidate could win the
election outright and avoid a runoff. A candidate needs either 45 percent of
the vote, or 40 percent and a margin of victory of at least 10 percentage
points, not 50 percent of the vote.
When we
learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction. If you spot an error,
please let us know at nytnews@nytimes.com.Learn more
Jack
Nicas is the Brazil bureau chief, covering Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay
and Uruguay. He previously reported on technology from San Francisco and,
before joining The Times in 2018, spent seven years at The Wall Street Journal.


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