Argentina's Power Reset: Milei Seeks Macri's Machinery To Rescue His Agenda
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina's president, Javier Milei, and former president Mauricio Macri have reopened a direct line after more than a year without speaking. The ice broke at the Olivos residence, with cabinet chief Guillermo Francos at the table.
The timing is no mystery: three weeks ago, Milei's party was beaten in Buenos Aires Province-the country's most populous-by roughly a million votes, a shock that exposed how hard it is to govern without reliable votes in Congress.
The story behind the story is a tale of overreach meeting arithmetic. Milei rode into office vowing to shatter the old order and proved he could move opinion with a lean team and combative style.
As inflation began to ease, he acted like he no longer needed the center-right PRO, Macri's party-even though PRO legislators were frequently the ones supplying the extra votes to keep bills alive. PRO, for its part, felt used: visible when needed, invisible when decisions were made.
The Buenos Aires setback reordered priorities. For Milei , reconciling with Macri offers a path to steadier governance: clearer floor tactics, a few seasoned managers in tricky ministries, and a chance to pass reforms before national legislative elections arrive in a few weeks.
For Macri, re-engagement is leverage-an opening to shape policy, demand competence in execution, and avoid being blamed for drift if things go south.
Milei-Macri Coordination Key to Easing Policy Gridlock
What to watch now is whether this thaw produces concrete moves rather than headlines. Signs would include targeted cabinet adjustments, a voting protocol on flagship economic bills, and coordinated candidate operations in key districts.
Argentina's fragmented Congress rewards discipline; even a modest pact could shorten legislative timelines and calm markets.
Why this matters beyond Argentina : policy gridlock or progress in Buenos Aires affects energy projects, food exports, transport corridors, and investor sentiment across the Southern Cone, including Brazil.
A functional Milei–Macri understanding would mean faster, more predictable rules for business and trade. A breakdown would signal renewed volatility-slower decisions, shakier financing, and harder cross-border coordination at a time when the region needs the opposite.
The timing is no mystery: three weeks ago, Milei's party was beaten in Buenos Aires Province-the country's most populous-by roughly a million votes, a shock that exposed how hard it is to govern without reliable votes in Congress.
The story behind the story is a tale of overreach meeting arithmetic. Milei rode into office vowing to shatter the old order and proved he could move opinion with a lean team and combative style.
As inflation began to ease, he acted like he no longer needed the center-right PRO, Macri's party-even though PRO legislators were frequently the ones supplying the extra votes to keep bills alive. PRO, for its part, felt used: visible when needed, invisible when decisions were made.
The Buenos Aires setback reordered priorities. For Milei , reconciling with Macri offers a path to steadier governance: clearer floor tactics, a few seasoned managers in tricky ministries, and a chance to pass reforms before national legislative elections arrive in a few weeks.
For Macri, re-engagement is leverage-an opening to shape policy, demand competence in execution, and avoid being blamed for drift if things go south.
Milei-Macri Coordination Key to Easing Policy Gridlock
What to watch now is whether this thaw produces concrete moves rather than headlines. Signs would include targeted cabinet adjustments, a voting protocol on flagship economic bills, and coordinated candidate operations in key districts.
Argentina's fragmented Congress rewards discipline; even a modest pact could shorten legislative timelines and calm markets.
Why this matters beyond Argentina : policy gridlock or progress in Buenos Aires affects energy projects, food exports, transport corridors, and investor sentiment across the Southern Cone, including Brazil.
A functional Milei–Macri understanding would mean faster, more predictable rules for business and trade. A breakdown would signal renewed volatility-slower decisions, shakier financing, and harder cross-border coordination at a time when the region needs the opposite.

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