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Argentina’s wake-up call? National strike, politics slow Milei’s broad reforms.

This month Argentina witnessed its first national strike in five years, with hundreds of thousands of people urging Congress to block new President Javier Milei’s wide-ranging package of economic and legislative reforms. Just days later, the president was forced to ditch some of his controversial fiscal proposals.

“What we’re seeing is a government that’s emerged out of great political weakness,” says Carlos Fara, a political analyst in Buenos Aires. Mr. Milei’s fantasy of how he’ll govern is starting to crumble, he adds.

Why We Wrote This

It’s common for presidential candidates to promise big. In Argentina, where the economy is in crisis, newly installed President Javier Milei is working to square his at-times extreme ideas with a challenging political reality.

Mr. Milei rose to power promising to dollarize the struggling economy and cut the waste of traditional parties. While he secured a majority in the presidential runoff, the number of seats his party controls in the Congress is just a fraction of what he needs to govern.

In his short time in office so far, he’s had to soften some of his stances in order to build political capital and grapple with a worsening economic picture. He devalued the official currency within days of taking office, accelerating already sky-high inflation.

“What I’m hoping for is that [Mr. Milei] can maintain stability,” says Juan Sucno, who recently had to shutter his motorcycle repair shop. “To hope for things to improve is pretty difficult.”

In the teeming crowd in front of Argentina’s National Congress last week, Alicia Ambrosi weaved her way around banners and placards pleading for more economic assistance – and deriding a new president intent on fundamentally changing how the country works. 

The retiree, who once sewed socks in a factory, sees herself as part of the growing number of Argentines slipping below the poverty line. Her pension is roughly $150 a month, about minimum wage, but with climbing inflation, she says she can barely cover basic expenses. 

“If I ate two bananas before, now I eat one,” Ms. Ambrosi says of a brutal economic picture that’s rapidly deteriorating.

Why We Wrote This

It’s common for presidential candidates to promise big. In Argentina, where the economy is in crisis, newly installed President Javier Milei is working to square his at-times extreme ideas with a challenging political reality.

The public turnout for the Jan. 24 national strike against President Javier Milei demonstrates the power struggle underway in Argentina today, as the fledgling administration attempts an overhaul of the role of the state. Tens of thousands – mostly those who did not vote for Mr. Milei in the November election – are urging Congress to block the president’s wide-ranging package of economic and legislative reforms, which include privatizing state companies, rolling back environmental protections, and curtailing workers’ rights. 

Agustin Marcarian/Reuters

Demonstrators protest outside the National Congress during a one-day national strike, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Jan. 24, 2024.

While the scale of the strike, the first in five years and promoted by powerful unions, was minimized by government officials, days later Mr. Milei was forced to ditch controversial fiscal proposals. It was viewed as a trade-off to secure congressional approval of his broader reforms package. On Friday, his economy minister announced a backtracking on changes to pension plans, taxes, and export-tariff hikes.

“What we’re seeing is a government that emerges out of great political weakness,” says Carlos Fara, a political analyst in Buenos Aires. “It leaves the impression that they have sort of bought into a fantasy” that they hold more power than they actually do. 

Getting worse before better?

Mr. Milei rose to the presidency using fiery rhetoric that promised to dollarize the struggling economy and cut the waste he said was driven by a corrupt political class. He rode the wave of “outsider” status, going from incendiary media personality to legislator and then president in a handful of years. While he secured 56% of the vote in the runoff in November, that was only after forging an alliance with another conservative block. The number of seats that his party controls in the Congress is just a fraction of what he needs to govern.

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