One year in, ’El Loco’ is curbing public spending, slashing red tape—and offering his services to Donald Trump.
In a sweeping move to overhaul Argentina's food trade policies, Javier Milei's administration officially deregulated food imports and exports on Monday. The reform, outlined in Decree 35/2025, seeks to boost foreign trade, cut bureaucratic red tape, and lower consumer prices.
Outgoing Uruguayan President Luis Lacalle Pou will chair the meeting, along with Argentina's Javier Milei, Brazil's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Paraguay's Santiago Peña. Uruguay's President ...
After Milei's unlikely victory, political scientist Ian Bremmer warned, Economic collapse (is) coming imminently. ... Seven months later, Argentina was out of the recession that had set in before Milei's victory.
The Washington Blade reports that Javier Milei’s rise to power marked a sea change in Argentine politics that profoundly impacted the country’s LGBTQ commun
Argentine President Javier Milei ran on stanching inflation, cutting federal spending and improving the economy. Sound familiar? President-elect Donald Trump and members of his coterie have spent ...
Argentine President Javier Milei’s radical economic policies have led to an economic miracle despite predictions of doom and gloom from economists, academics and political opponents. Milei was ...
Nicolás Maduro branded his Argentine counterpart Javier Milei a "Nazi, Zionist and social sadist" on Friday as he was sworn-in as Venezuela's leader for a third term.
Argentina remains embroiled in a deep political crisis a year into Javier Milei’s Presidency. The self-professed “anarcho-capitalist” libertarian has turned the political system on its head ...
Argentine President Javier Milei's “chainsaw” policies reached the South American country's diplomatic efforts: After recalling Ambassador Martín García Moritán from Uruguay citing “service reasons,” Buenos Aires announced it would be unifying its presence in Montevideo under one single Ambassador who would also be representing the country before the Latin American Integration Association (ALADI) and the Southern Common Market (Mercosur).
After two years of recession, President Javier Milei’s government will see approximately five percent in GDP this year, followed by a further 4.7 percent in 2026, predicts World Bank.
Considering the dependency and state-entrenched special interests operating in Argentina, it's a miracle that he ever got elected at all.