Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Buenos Aires Shock: Alleged Narco Money Puts Milei Ally José Luis Espert Under Fire


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The headline is simple: José Luis Espert, President Javier Milei's top pick in Buenos Aires Province and a“law-and-order” standard-bearer, is accused of taking campaign help tied to a U.S. cocaine-trafficking case.

He admits he knew the businessman at the center, Federico“Fred” Machado, and once flew on his plane during the 2019 campaign. He denies wrongdoing and calls it a smear.

The allegation centers on a $200,000 payment recorded in financial documents used by U.S. prosecutors in Texas, part of a case that exposed how aircraft were bought to move cocaine and launder money.

Argentine complainants say that entry links to Espert's 2019 run. Machado, a 53-year-old Argentine aviation investor, has been detained in Patagonia since 2021 on a U.S. extradition request.

In the related U.S. prosecutions, a key figure in the aircraft-trust network was convicted and later sentenced, underscoring that the criminal scaffolding here is not hypothetical.



Why this is politically explosive is about where it lands. Buenos Aires Province holds almost 40% of Argentina's electorate and recently tilted away from Milei's movement in local races.
Budget Power Struggle and Alleged Cartel Links Test Milei Bloc
The government also lacks a congressional majority, and Espert currently chairs the lower house Budget Committee. Opposition lawmakers are moving to unseat him just as the 2026 budget debate opens.

That's not background noise; it affects whether the administration can pass numbers that anchor everything from debt service to basic services.

There is a second story behind the headline. Espert built his brand on“hard line” security, yet past comments from figures now close to Milei once hammered him for the very link that today is under scrutiny.

Add to that a province on edge after a recent narco-revenge triple femicide, and any hint of cartel money touching politics becomes a litmus test for credibility, not just a campaign jab.

What to watch next is straightforward: whether Argentine courts seek confirmation from U.S. authorities for the ledger entry and bank trail; how the extradition case moves; and whether Milei's bloc closes ranks or creates distance.

If the allegation holds, it is a judgment problem. If it collapses, it still tests whether Argentina can vet suspected narco-political finance without derailing governance in its decisive province.

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