The Japan Times - Milei suffers crushing Defeat

EUR -
AED 4.275863
AFN 72.759652
ALL 95.54615
AMD 428.471089
ANG 2.08462
AOA 1068.820723
ARS 1631.156554
AUD 1.622324
AWG 2.095728
AZN 1.984681
BAM 1.95573
BBD 2.344906
BDT 142.92424
BGN 1.944276
BHD 0.439582
BIF 3458.960605
BMD 1.164293
BND 1.48744
BOB 8.044676
BRL 5.833686
BSD 1.164253
BTN 110.814534
BWP 15.651369
BYN 3.200471
BYR 22820.144357
BZD 2.341506
CAD 1.606707
CDF 2625.480303
CHF 0.912037
CLF 0.02649
CLP 1042.578014
CNY 7.91108
CNH 7.898535
COP 4255.118632
CRC 529.77865
CUC 1.164293
CUP 30.853767
CVE 110.260557
CZK 24.253855
DJF 207.321645
DKK 7.471617
DOP 68.49724
DZD 155.250352
EGP 60.868425
ERN 17.464396
ETB 187.708535
FJD 2.56005
FKP 0.866793
GBP 0.862561
GEL 3.097303
GGP 0.866793
GHS 13.517455
GIP 0.866793
GMD 84.409744
GNF 10203.5888
GTQ 8.877642
GYD 243.580184
HKD 9.121363
HNL 30.974752
HRK 7.535767
HTG 152.453856
HUF 356.107155
IDR 20638.43377
ILS 3.35409
IMP 0.866793
INR 110.85671
IQD 1525.138538
IRR 1540825.460958
ISK 143.604031
JEP 0.866793
JMD 183.493393
JOD 0.825483
JPY 185.047505
KES 150.894912
KGS 101.817877
KHR 4670.811768
KMF 494.825057
KPW 1047.863814
KRW 1760.824448
KWD 0.360174
KYD 0.970261
KZT 551.097791
LAK 25519.971555
LBP 104282.597454
LKR 377.214798
LRD 213.051414
LSL 19.008534
LTL 3.437855
LVL 0.704269
LYD 7.421733
MAD 10.712868
MDL 20.211185
MGA 4891.802862
MKD 61.63781
MMK 2444.545444
MNT 4167.048443
MOP 9.394421
MRU 46.558124
MUR 55.048268
MVR 17.930001
MWK 2018.818642
MXN 20.095663
MYR 4.601983
MZN 74.408231
NAD 19.008534
NGN 1597.04976
NIO 42.848273
NOK 10.763133
NPR 177.302855
NZD 1.982401
OMR 0.447692
PAB 1.164253
PEN 3.96544
PGK 5.079795
PHP 71.374646
PKR 324.153737
PLN 4.232263
PYG 7218.740088
QAR 4.256647
RON 5.242346
RSD 117.415456
RUB 83.185548
RWF 1702.731381
SAR 4.354613
SBD 9.36695
SCR 16.254975
SDG 699.162418
SEK 10.814944
SGD 1.486831
SHP 0.869262
SLE 28.640522
SLL 24414.646181
SOS 665.373186
SRD 43.21741
STD 24098.516046
STN 24.499013
SVC 10.187589
SYP 128.683484
SZL 19.004234
THB 37.82206
TJS 10.716868
TMT 4.075026
TND 3.403363
TOP 2.803338
TRY 53.216924
TTD 7.901682
TWD 36.578244
TZS 3037.739602
UAH 51.559422
UGX 4388.823132
USD 1.164293
UYU 46.498126
UZS 13975.436796
VES 612.663241
VND 30686.108402
VUV 138.375475
WST 3.172463
XAF 655.930566
XAG 0.014966
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.14656
XCG 2.098215
XDR 0.816005
XOF 655.933383
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.8583
ZAR 18.975474
ZMK 10480.040709
ZMW 21.917117
ZWL 374.901897
  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%


Milei suffers crushing Defeat




Argentina’s political earthquake arrived in its largest province. In Buenos Aires—home to roughly two out of every five Argentines and a third of national output—voters delivered a decisive rebuke to President Javier Milei’s libertarian experiment. The opposition’s double‑digit win there has redefined the battlefield ahead of the October 26 midterms and raised the most consequential question of Milei’s tenure: has the shock‑therapy project reached its political limits, or can it be reshaped to survive?

The weekend vote was more than a provincial skirmish. Buenos Aires Province is the bellwether of national mood, the place where governing coalitions are tested against kitchen‑table realities. Since taking office in December 2023, Milei has cut public spending, torn up regulations, and promised to “chainsaw” a bloated state. The promise was stabilization and a return to growth. The reality, for now, is disinflation alongside recessionary pain—and a public impatient with the trade‑offs.

The defeat capped a brutal week in Congress. Senators in a rare show of cross‑party force overturned the president’s veto of an emergency law for people with disabilities, the first time lawmakers have reversed a veto in his term. That vote exposed a governing weakness that polls had long foreshadowed: with only a small minority in the legislature, the administration needs allies to pass—or defend—its agenda. Without them, vetoes can be overridden and decrees can be struck down, turning executive maximalism into legislative stasis.

The economic fallout was immediate. Investors who had priced in a tighter race in Buenos Aires marked down Argentine assets: the peso slid, local stocks tumbled, and dollar bonds sank. Those moves do not merely reflect skittish traders; they speak to a deeper concern about policy durability. Stabilization plans succeed when markets, businesses, and households believe governments can stick with them through the next election. A double‑digit loss in the country’s biggest province—on the eve of national midterms—casts doubt on that belief.

Yet the macro scoreboard holds genuine wins. Monthly inflation, once galloping, is now down to the low single digits, with August clocking in at 1.9% and the annual rate falling to the mid‑30s—its lowest in years. That is not trivial in a country battered by recurring price spirals. But stabilization has not felt like relief. Unemployment climbed earlier this year, real wages are fragile, and public services—from universities to hospitals—have become flashpoints in street politics and Senate votes alike. In short, disinflation without growth has proved a hard sell.

Politically, the map is shifting. The Peronist opposition emerges emboldened and more unified in the province that most shapes national outcomes. Moderate center‑right blocs, kingmakers on pivotal bills, now see greater leverage in demanding changes to the government’s approach. Meanwhile, the administration is fending off an ethics storm tied to the disability agency that, regardless of legal outcomes, has further complicated coalition building. Governance in Argentina has always been a game of arithmetic; after Buenos Aires, the numbers look harsher for the Casa Rosada.

Milei’s response has been defiance and focus. He scrapped a high‑profile foreign trip and insisted the program will not retreat “one millimeter.” That message shores up his core base—and markets like clarity—but it also hardens the lines with potential legislative partners who bristle at being bulldozed. If the government wants to avoid paralysis, it faces a strategic choice: continue governing by confrontation, or translate a movement into a coalition that can last beyond a single news cycle.

What would a survivable version of the project look like? First, a pivot from chainsaw to scalpel: prioritize a handful of reforms with broad support (tax rationalization, simplification of import/export rules, and credible, rules‑based monetary policy) over sprawling omnibus fights that unify the opposition. Second, institutionalize the stabilization: codify fiscal rules, improve budget transparency, and pre‑agree social floors (for disability benefits, school meals, essential medicines) that take the sting out of austerity. Third, build a minimum viable coalition: offer procedural concessions in Congress and genuine co‑ownership of reforms to centrists who can deliver votes and legitimacy.

None of this is guaranteed. The midterms on October 26 could narrow or widen the path. A better‑than‑expected result for the ruling party would reduce veto risks and revive momentum; a worse‑than‑expected outcome would turn the next year into a trench war of vetoes, court challenges, and market flare‑ups. In either case, Argentina does not need to “fail again.” It needs a version of reform that is less theatrical and more durable—a politics that trades viral moments for legislative math.

The Buenos Aires result was a verdict on pace, priorities, and tone. It was not a binding judgment on whether Argentina must choose between stabilization and dignity. The question now is whether the president can adjust his method without abandoning his aim—turning a shock into a strategy, and a plurality into a governing majority. If he can, the project may yet outlast the week’s defeat. If he cannot, the defeat may define the project.