Argentina’s midterm elections have turned into a political earthquake — and the aftershocks could reach Washington. President Javier Milei’s La Libertad Avanza coalition swept the vote with roughly 41% nationwide, trouncing the Peronist opposition by nearly ten points. For a leader who campaigned wielding chainsaws and promising shock-therapy economics, it was more than a victory — it was validation.
Half of Argentina’s lower house and a third of the Senate were on the ballot. Milei’s alliance claimed 16 of 24 provinces, including the ultimate prize: Buenos Aires. With around 115 deputies and 26 senators, he is now within reach of a working majority — enough to push his reform agenda through without relying on establishment parties.
Milei called the result proof that Argentines “don’t want to go back.” Translation: the Peronist populist era is over, at least for now.
At the heart of Milei’s next phase is the May Pact, a ten-point economic detox plan centered on fiscal discipline, sweeping tax reform, privatization of state enterprises, and full-scale market liberalization. The measures have been painful but transformative: subsidies slashed, government payrolls cut, and the peso gradually stabilized.
Eighteen months of austerity later, inflation is finally cooling and investor confidence is returning. International markets — long wary of Argentina’s volatility — are watching closely as the country’s sovereign bonds and currency begin to show signs of recovery.
The political symbolism isn’t lost abroad. Former U.S. President Donald Trump publicly congratulated Milei, calling Argentina “a country finally on the right track.” The two share a populist-economic synergy: pro-market, anti-bureaucratic, and openly nationalist. Milei’s unapologetic embrace of Austrian-school economics, his admiration for thinkers like Hayek and Mises, and his public use of the Gadsden flag have earned him a cult following among the American right.
For Washington, the significance goes beyond ideology. Milei represents a new Latin American current — one that’s pro-U.S., pro-market, and skeptical of China’s influence in the hemisphere. His administration is already exploring deeper cooperation on energy, lithium mining, agriculture, and defense, aligning with U.S. strategic interests in the Southern Cone.
The broader takeaway: Argentina, long mired in economic dysfunction, is rebranding itself as a disciplined, opportunity-driven economy — and the United States is paying attention.
If Milei consolidates control of Congress, he will command the strongest mandate for structural reform in decades. His government’s message is clear: Argentina is done apologizing for wanting to grow — and it’s inviting the world to take notice.









