The eccentric far-right populist Javier Milei has failed to win the first round of Argentina’s presidential election, with the centrist finance minister Sergio Massa unexpectedly beating his radical challenger.

Supporters of Milei, a potty-mouthed political outsider described as an Argentinian mashup of Donald Trump, Jair Bolsonaro and Boris Johnson, had hoped he was heading for a sensational outright victory similar to Bolsonaro’s shock triumph in Brazil in 2018.

  • travellingwolf@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Comparing Milei to Trump or Bolsonaro is very, very misleading.

    Milei is has radical capitalist / free market ideology, but is far removed from social conservatism.

    Just to give you an idea, he wants to close the argentinian central bank and kill the national currency or let it kill itself with a free floating exchange rate.

    Such a move is the opposite of what alt-right / fascism would do which seeks governmental control of media, industrial and financial institutions.

    If anything, the current ruling party “Union for the motherland” (Union por la patria) openly advocates and defends Peronism which is a sort of decaf fascist ideology heavy in nationalism and populism thinly clothed in laborist rethoric to make it seem left wing. Current ruling party which btw has lead the country to over 300% inflation (if you take the free exchange rate as a reference since the official exchange rate is manipulated and it is illegal for argentines to freely buy foreign currency except for a small token amount).

    Just to make it easier to understand. If you’re familiar with the political compass:

    • Current ruling party leans top left
    • Milei is solidly bottom right
    • Trump is top right.

    These are three very very different quadrants.

      • vsis@feddit.cl
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        1 year ago

        Ecuador and Puerto Rico already did it. Panamá did something similar.

        I totally understand the initiative. Corruption can be so damn high, that you trust gringo central bank more than any institution of your own country.

        edit: typos

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Did you conflate Puerto Rico with Costa Rica? Puerto Rico uses USD, and has since the late 1800s when they became a territory of the US.

      • anonono@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        we have problems with governments over printing. this shit has happened again and again for decades and it won’t stop.

      • shotgun_surgery@links.hackliberty.org
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        11 months ago

        Normal people have zero control over the US Dollar, but also have zero control over the Argentinian Peso… and the Argentinian Peso has 140% inflation per year.

    • amenotef@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Milei probably has a small resemblance with DT. Maybe just a small percentage, but that is enough to call him a Full DT by the press in the rest of world. It is just cheap press.

      The guy has a lot of cons and pros. But he is not a DT. He is mainly an economist. Not a businessman.

      Argentina as always is a sinking ship with a lot of holes. Every year there are more holes. They still have not found a party that can close those holes. And there were only 3 big parties.

      Perhaps a new party (like the one from Milei) manages to start closing some of those holes. Perhaps they keep opening holes like the current party. Even if you put the best party ever made, it would take 15-30 years maybe more to recover. You have a lot of adults that never worked (legally) and live from the state. It takes time to educate the new generations letting them know that money is not always a free thing that comes without working. (And you cannot tell them “now you have to find a job” in the short term otherwise the country will go violent. Therefore no matter how far right the party is. It always end up adapting to a situation to control the masses that requires socialism).

      Time will tell about what will happen if the same party (probably was the worst government in the past 30 years) wins the election. But nowadays the country is at worst since I was born. 40% poverty (oficial, real is perhaps higher ), 100+% annual inflation (not even the old 20-30% annual). It is probable that the current government will never leave and will stay on power just like it happens in many other countries, like Venezuela. (While it is still a totally different country, we always compare to Venezuela because the current party always liked Venezuela as a role model to follow).

      I hope not! But with 40+% poverty… soon there will not be enough tax payers to cover the costs but maybe hyperinflation puts a stop to the excess of public spending (printing ARS money) to solve any problem.

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Are there even politicians in Argentina that aren’t socially conservative? He is by default

    • P03 Locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Yes, I was very confused by the “far-right populist” descriptor. Those are two very opposite words.