Javier
Milei hails ‘tipping point’ as his far-right party wins Argentina’s midterm
elections
The
result falls short of giving Milei a congressional majority but has been widely
described as surprising by Argentinian analysts
Tiago
Rogero South America correspondent
Mon 27
Oct 2025 04.35 GMT
The party
of Argentina’s far-right president, Javier Milei, has won Sunday’s midterm
elections after a campaign in which US president Donald Trump announced a $40bn
bailout for the country and made continued aid conditional on the victory of
his Argentinian counterpart.
With more
than 95% of ballots counted, Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza, won 40.84% of
the nationwide vote in an election widely seen as a de facto referendum on the
self-styled anarcho-capitalist’s nearly two years in power.
The
Peronist opposition, Fuerza Patria, secured 31.67%.
While the
result still falls short of giving Milei a congressional majority – which
remains with the Peronists – it is being widely described as surprising by
Argentinian analysts, given the recent blows to the libertarian’s popularity
from corruption allegations involving his sister to the ongoing economic
crisis.
The
government itself had downplayed expectations, considering anything between 30%
and 35% a satisfactory outcome, especially after Milei’s heavy defeat in
September’s Buenos Aires provincial elections, when he lost to the Peronists by
14 percentage points.
This
time, however, Milei’s party turned the tide, winning in Argentina’s largest
electoral district, home to about 40% of the electorate.
“I am the
king of a lost world,” Milei sang as he took the stage before hundreds of
supporters at a hotel in Buenos Aires. He began his speech by saying: “Today we
passed the tipping point – the construction of a great Argentina begins.”
The
president hailed the US bailout as “something unprecedented, not only in
Argentine history but in world history, because the US has never offered
support of such magnitude”.
“Now we
are focused on carrying out the reforms that Argentina needs to consolidate
growth and the definitive take-off of the country – to make Argentina great
again,” the president said in Spanish, echoing the Trumpist slogan.
Trump
soon offered his congratulations on Sunday night, calling the win for Milei’s
party a “landslide victory”, adding: “Our confidence in him was justified by
the people of Argentina.”
Up for
grabs in the election were 127 of the 257 seats in the lower house and a third
of the senate, 24 of its 72 seats. Milei’s party secured 64 lower house seats
and 12 in the senate.
The new
seats in the lower house, combined with those already held, allow the
government to meet its main goal for this election: securing at least a third
of the lower house to sustain presidential vetoes.
Milei
began his administration almost two years ago with his “chainsaw” spending
cuts, slashing tens of thousands of public jobs and freezing investment in
infrastructure, healthcare, education and even the supply of medicines for
pensioners.
He
managed to bring down inflation from more than 200% in 2023 to about 30% in
September, achieving the country’s first fiscal surplus in 14 years. Economic
activity grew by 0.3% in August 2025 after three consecutive months of decline.
But
purchasing power has plummeted: most Argentinians say they are struggling to
make ends meet, more than 250,000 jobs have been lost and about 18,000
businesses have closed.
The
libertarian’s popularity also took a hit when Milei promoted a cryptocurrency
that later collapsed; his sister and most powerful cabinet member, Karina
Milei, was implicated in an alleged corruption scheme; and one of his party’s
leading candidates withdrew from Sunday’s election after admitting to having
received $200,000 from a businessman accused of drug trafficking in the US.
To
prevent the peso from devaluing, the government burned through its dollar
reserves, even after taking a $20bn loan (of which $14bn has already been
disbursed) from the International Monetary Fund, and was forced to turn to
Trump, who came to the rescue with a $40bn bailout.
Trump’s
stance was seen by many in the country as interference in the election, and
some predicted that – due to anti-American sentiment among parts of the
population – US support could backfire on Milei.
Although
voting is compulsory, turnout was the lowest since the return to democracy in
1983, at 67.85%, surpassing the previous record low of 71% set in 2021.
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