Argentina‘s voters wisely reelected and strengthened President Javier Milei’s Liberty Advances party this weekend rather than switching to the socialist Peron alternative in the middle of his term of office. It is a decision that sets the country on a clearer path to prosperity while other leftist governments in the region continue to struggle.
With 40% of the vote, compared to the socialist party’s 31%, Liberty Advances added 14 seats in Argentina’s Senate and 64 in the lower house. Milei will still need to cooperate with other parties to pass major legislation, but for now, his conservative reforms have been affirmed by voters, and Argentina’s economy should continue to recover after decades of cynical mismanagement.
Milei has already delivered tangible results. He has slashed government spending by over 30%, cut the number of government agencies in half, eliminated hundreds of regulations, including rent control, all while opening Argentina’s vast energy reserves for production. As a direct result, inflation has fallen, the budget is balanced, and Argentina posted its largest energy trade surplus in 20 years.
Argentina’s economy had responded positively to these reforms as well and was growing steadily until the socialist Peron opposition party won the Buenos Aires provincial election in September. Markets took this result as a sign that Milei had lost the faith of the public and that his party was heading for electoral disaster this month. Argentina’s peso immediately lost value, prompting stock and bond selloffs that caused the economy to stall.
This Sunday’s turn back right toward Milei’s Liberty Advances party, and away from the socialist alternative, should restore confidence to markets that Milei’s limited-government reforms are here to stay. “The Argentine people have decided to leave behind 100 years of decadence,” Milei said after the results were announced. “Today, we have passed the turning point. Today, we begin the construction of a great Argentina.”
Milei’s victory is a win not just for him, his party, and Argentina, but for the whole region. Everywhere that conservative governments have been installed in power in Latin America, prosperity and freedom have followed. In Ecuador, President Daniel Noboa of the National Democratic Action party has restored investor confidence and curbed gang violence through pragmatic, pro-market reforms. In Chile, President Sebastián Piñera’s National Renewal coalition preserved Chile’s market economy while maintaining one of the region’s lowest poverty rates through fiscal discipline. And in El Salvador, President Nayib Bukele of the New Ideas party has dramatically reduced crime, dismantling gang networks and turning the once-violent nation into Latin America’s safest success story.
By contrast, those Latin American countries that have turned left have fared poorly. In Bolivia, President Luis Arce of the Movement for Socialism party drained reserves, fueled inflation, and triggered shortages by clinging to state controls and subsidies. In Colombia, President Gustavo Petro of the Historic Pact coalition scared off investment with tax hikes, energy restrictions, and regulations, stalling growth and weakening the peso. And in Brazil, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of the Workers’ Party increased welfare spending and nationalized key sectors of the economy, causing debt and inflation while deterring private investment needed for sustained recovery.
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It is not a coincidence that every one of the countries that turned right also turned away from China and toward the United States, while the socialist countries have all increased ties with the world’s largest and most powerful communist regime.
Milei’s midterm victory is more than a national win. It’s proof that free markets, fiscal discipline, and individual enterprise still work in Latin America. Argentines have seen firsthand that state control breeds stagnation while limited government unleashes growth. By rejecting the Peronist Left and embracing Milei’s Liberty Advances movement, Argentina has sent a powerful message to its neighbors and the world: Socialism fails, and freedom delivers. If Milei stays the course, Argentina could once again become the economic engine and moral example of the Southern Hemisphere.
