The Times assures that “brutal adjustments” and an anti-progressive agenda support the management of Xavier Meili
A few days later Xavier Miley British newspaper celebrates seven months as head of the Presidency of the Nation many times Analyzed the popularity that the Argentine president generates among his followers, his positive image despite the cuts and poverty rates, his anti-progressive policies and his difficulties in Congress. “Opponents predicted it wouldn’t last even six months”He sheds light on this in today’s publication.
“So far, Miley’s economic policy has included devaluing the currency, the peso, by 50%, laying off thousands of public employees and using a metaphorical chainsaw on all government departments,” the newspaper summarized. Closing the Ministry of Women, Gender and Diversity as part of the policy Anti-wake (which can be translated as anti-progress).
In a journalistic note titled Brutal adjustments and an anti-progressive agenda (the Awakened) inspired Argentina’s star leader, Written by journalist Stephen Gibbs, It contains a brief review of Miley’s rise to power and the resistance of the political system. In fact, we remember the day when the Peronist leader Guillermo Moreno He predicted that his administration would last six months: The note said: “On Tuesday, Miley will begin his seventh month in office.”
“The president says there is evidence that the therapy is working. Argentina’s inflation, which remains the highest in the world at nearly 300%, is slowing. In April, the country recorded its first quarterly budget surplus since 2008″, he published many times,
On the contrary, he adds: “One might expect, however, that any government implementing an aggressive programme of cuts would already be paying a serious political price, or at least not be celebrating it at rock concerts. But Miley, a former television commentator and economics professor, challenges the conventional analysis. Last month, while the number of Argentines living in poverty rose to 55% – a ten percentage point increase since he took office – his approval rating rose slightly to 54%.,
Nor did the paper note the fact that many of Miley’s “fans” were wearing T-shirts bearing the legend “There is no ‘silver’.” “This motto has become a slogan of her administration: a reference and justification for the intense austerity program imposed by her government,” it said. Times.
In one of the explanations for this phenomenon, the newspaper cites Nicolás Saldías The Economist Intelligence Unitwhich said that “Miley continues to take advantage of A deep desire for profound political change In Argentina,” a country that experienced periods of prosperity, “but has since declined, largely due to poor governance.” Another reason is The president was “honest to the Argentines” About the “hard times” to come.
However, the newspaper says, “there are many in Argentina who do not agree.” The cuts in state subsidies for transport and fuel have led to a huge increase in the cost of living. A direct consequence of this is the increase in the number of homeless people on the streets of Buenos Aires. Meanwhile, in an effort to end what the president calls the ‘business of poverty’, in particular, corruption in federal aid programs, the government has stopped aid to thousands of soup kitchens. According to a report published last week by the Social Credit Observatory of the Argentine Catholic University, 17% of the population is classified as poor, ”he highlighted.
He also reviewed Milley’s meetings with Meta’s boss, Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAI’s Sam Altman, and Apple CEO Tim Cook. “Miley has previously met Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who has shown interest in accessing Argentina’s lithium for the production of electric vehicle batteries,” he explained, mentioning her presence at the inauguration. Nayib BukeleWho was re-elected with over 80% of the vote in San Salvador.
“And Miley’s gift for wooing tech billionaires in California has not been reflected in her ability to legislate across her country, where her plan to allow the privatization of state-owned companies as well as other deregulation schemes are being implemented in a Congress where her party does not have a majority. The blockade led Miley to accept the resignation of her chief of staff, Nicholas Posey, last week, the highest-level departure since she took office,” he said.
At the time, the paper explained that Miley had “threatened to use his veto power to block approval of some reform measures, but ultimately, to govern effectively, he will have to negotiate with people who are not his natural allies, something he does not seem to be averse to”. This was evident last month, when he described the wife of the president of the Spanish government as “corrupt” at a rally in Madrid, leading Spain to withdraw its ambassador to Buenos Aires.