Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Argentina's October 26 Elections: Weak Numbers For Milei Put Trump's Aid On The Line


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina votes on October 26, and the stakes are bigger than a routine midterm. President Javier Milei has won rare, personal backing from Washington: a proposed $20 billion currency-swap line and efforts to assemble roughly another $20 billion in market financing.

The message from Donald Trump has been just as blunt-support continues if Milei's bloc performs well. It is foreign help with visible conditions.

Voters aren't sold. The latest national poll by the firm Zentrix shows the opposition banner“Fuerza Patria” leading La Libertad Avanza (LLA) 43.5% to 36.5%, with 6.4% undecided.

Milei's job approval sits at 33.8% versus 59.7% disapproval. Asked about direct U.S. Treasury assistance, 58.2% oppose it and 37.3% support it. Three in four respondents say their wages are not outpacing inflation, a simple summary of a grinding cost-of-living squeeze.

The story behind the story is trust. Argentines have lived through repeated busts, IMF programs, and a currency that can't hold a value.


Argentina Election Shapes Policy and Regional Markets
A giant lifeline from abroad may stabilize markets, but many hear echoes of lost sovereignty or deals that help balance sheets before kitchen tables.

That sentiment is amplified by a late-campaign controversy around libertarian figure José Luis Espert, whose past payment linked to an alleged narco network has dominated headlines just as LLA tries to shore up support in vote-rich Buenos Aires Province.

This election is also a procedural reset. For the first time in a national contest, Argentina will use a single paper ballot-an attempt to simplify voting and cut waste-while renewing a large share of Congress that Milei needs to pass deregulation, fiscal, and labor reforms.

If LLA underperforms, those plans meet a narrower corridor; if it holds or gains, U.S. backing plus a clearer mandate could quicken policy.

Why this matters beyond Argentina: outcomes will shape inflation paths, the peso, bond pricing, and supply-chain decisions across the Southern Cone.

For readers in Brazil and other neighbors, it is a live test of whether outside money and bold messaging can overcome domestic fatigue with painful fixes.

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The Rio Times

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