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Argentina’s President-elect Milei promises drastic change: Can he deliver?

Far-right former TV pundit Javier Milei is Argentina’s new president-elect after winning nearly 56% of the vote in Sunday’s runoff election. His victory underscores a broad rejection of the Peronist movement, a political coalition rooted in the working class that took shape in the 1940s, as well as a desire for drastic political and economic change.

Argentina clocked in with 143% annual inflation this year, the highest in nearly three decades, and unemployment and poverty are on the rise.

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With repeated economic crises and politicians who no longer inspire hope, protest candidates can transform into presidents-elect. Will Javier Milei be able to shake up Argentina as promised?

“Those factors contributed to the population’s disgust and exhaustion with traditional politics and gave Milei visibility,” says Paola Zuban, a pollster with Zuban Córdoba y Asociados.

Mr. Milei is promising to upend politics as Argentina knows it. That may be tempered by the fact that he faces a divided Congress, where Peronists and their allies hold a plurality in both the upper and lower houses. Meanwhile late-in-the-game endorsements from other opposition coalitions could sideline some of his flashier pledges, such as trading in the peso for the U.S. dollar.

If he’s going to succeed, “he’ll have to turn to others,” says political scientist Pablo Touzon.  

Argentina elected far-right libertarian Javier Milei as its next president, underscoring deep-seated discontent with the country’s politics and economy, and a desire for drastic change – even if it comes at a cost.

The economist and former TV pundit burst onto the political scene just two years ago with a promise to implement radical free-market policies. Pledges to destroy Argentina’s political elite and assertions that the “caste trembles” have been his go-to rallying cries, often punctuated by images of a rumbling chain saw. 

Having won nearly 56% of the vote, he is now Argentina’s president-elect. 

Why We Wrote This

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With repeated economic crises and politicians who no longer inspire hope, protest candidates can transform into presidents-elect. Will Javier Milei be able to shake up Argentina as promised?

Mr. Milei bested the ruling Peronist coalition’s candidate, Minister of Economy Sergio Massa, by nearly 12 percentage points. The result shocked many after Mr. Massa won the most votes in last month’s first-round election. 

Mr. Milei’s performance highlights popular frustration with the status quo in Argentina, where inflation reached its highest point in nearly three decades and 2 in 5 people now live in poverty. He’s committed to shrinking the size of the government, “blowing up” the central bank, ditching the peso in favor of the U.S. dollar, and upending Argentina’s foreign policy.  

“The changes the country needs are drastic,” Mr. Milei said in his victory speech last night. “There is no room for gradualism, for tepid half-measures.”

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