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Javier Milei

Milei Closes State News Agency Télam for 'Spreading Propaganda'

"It is immoral that in a poor country like ours," the Argentine president said, "the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists."

Katarina Hall | 3.4.2024 4:15 PM

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Javier Milei | Riccardo De Luca / Avalon/Newscom
(Riccardo De Luca / Avalon/Newscom)

President Javier Milei has set his sights on Argentina's largest state-owned news agency, vowing to shutter it for being "a covert propaganda ministry." The move unfolded as police fenced off the agency's offices in Buenos Aires and prevented workers from entering since midnight on Monday.

During a speech at the opening of the Argentinian Congress' 142 session last Friday, Milei announced the closure of Telenoticiosa Americana (Télam), alleging that the agency has served as "a Kirchnerist propaganda agency for the last decades," referring to former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. "It is immoral that in a poor country like ours," Milei said, "the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists."

Established in 1945, Télam rose to become Argentina's most prestigious news agency, disseminating national news and photographs to smaller news outlets across the country. According to its website, the agency "is the only one in the country with a network of correspondents in all of the country's main cities and provinces."

Shortly after Milei's announcement, Télam's website went offline. Presidential spokesperson Manuel Adorni said at a press conference that the agency's staff was exempt "from providing services for seven days with pay, while progress is made" to close the agency.  

Télam workers, human rights activists, and the opposition rejected the closure announcement, claiming that the move was an attack on the free press. Many workers and union members plan to protest against Milei's decision by holding a "symbolic hug" of the building on Monday. 

In response to the events, Buenos Aires Press Union (SiPreBA) issued a statement posted on X (formerly Twitter) condemning the government for "carrying out one of the worst attacks on freedom of expression in the last 40 years of democracy. Tonight, city police fenced off the two buildings of the National News and Publicity Agency Télam, to prevent the massive embrace and impede access to the building." 

The Argentine Journalism Forum (Fopea) claimed the president's decisions "only exacerbate hostility and intolerance against journalism," adding that it was a "step backward" for democracy and freedom of expression in the country. 

Since assuming office, Milei has pledged to end Argentina's economic crisis by deregulating the economy and slashing government spending. His efforts to privatize or eliminate inefficient and corrupt state institutions, including Télam, were outlined in an omnibus bill presented to Congress last year. However, the bill was blocked by Congress last month, stalling many of his proposals indefinitely. 

But the president has been undeterred by setbacks. Since taking office in December, Milei has cut the number of government ministries from 18 to eight and fired over 50 percent of senior government workers.* On March 1, Milei told Argentina's lawmakers that he was going to keep pushing his free market reforms "with or without the support of political leaders, with all the legal resources of the executive." And last month he announced the closure of the National Institute against Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Racism (INADI)—an institution that he equated to "thought police." 

"The decision was made to move forward with the dismantling of institutes that serve absolutely no purpose, such as INADI," Adorni said.

Télam might be Milei's latest target, but it certainly won't be his last. 

*CORRECTION: This article previously misstated which government positions were eliminated. 

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NEXT: Rudy Carey Was Pardoned, but the Unjust Law That Kept Him From Working Is Still on the Books

Katarina Hall is a staff editor at Reason.

Javier MileiArgentinaGovernment ReformDeregulationWorldSocial MediaSouth AmericaPropagandaJournalism
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  1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    Can we hire this dude?

    1. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

      I like this guy more and more every time he talks. Based AF

    2. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      Wow..a govt nuking NPR and public bolshevik boys funding...damn can we get this guy over here?

    3. Public Entelectual   1 year ago

      If everyone donated fifteen dollars a month, Reason could send them DEFUND PBS coffee mugs.

  2. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Were there any arrests or court actions against journalists in the US we should know about?

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      "Hey! look over there! It's Trump and I bet he's saying something crazy! Boehm, Sullum, Lancaster, you better get on it...
      Journalist arrested for reporting outside the regimes guidelines? Sorry, we're all busy also local story."

    2. Public Entelectual   1 year ago

      There was that Citoyen Genet guy.

  3. JesseAz   1 year ago

    It is immoral that in a poor country like ours," Milei said, "the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists."

    Here it is just called muh private company.

    1. Rossami   1 year ago

      You missed the "state-owned" part of the description of the company?

      1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

        "State owned" sounds about right for most of the MSM in America.

      2. JesseAz   1 year ago

        It isnt solely funded by the state. Mostly funded but not exclusive.

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Télam

        Similar to the BBC.

        Twitter and Facebook, along with others, were also funded by the US to push messages and censor.

  4. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

    I always get a kick out of so-called professional writers stooping to such hyperbole.

    Télam workers, human rights activists, and the opposition rejected the closure announcement

    How do you "reject" an announcement? It's issued, it exists, you can't "reject" it. You can reject a present. You can reject an offer of employment. You can reject some philosophy you disagree with. But an announcement?

    C'mon, Katarina Hall, learn the tools of your trade before proclaiming yourself a professional.

  5. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'Télam workers, human rights activists, and the opposition rejected the closure announcement, claiming that the move was an attack on the free press.'

    Cuz nothing says free press like an official government agency. Looking at you NPR/PBS.

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Up here CBC shit it's pants when X labeled them government media. Apparently it doesn't count if they're also taking ad revenue.

    2. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      any liberal activist group name stands for the opposite. "human rights"...blah blah blah. The journalist who just said natural rights don't exist and only govt can decide on our rights.

      1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        "How dare you fetter the free press by shutting down Pravda?!"

  6. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

    Oh fuck. Better than BLM firebombing.

    Many workers and union members plan to protest against Milei's decision by holding a "symbolic hug" of the building on Monday.

    1. gnome   1 year ago

      Nahhh - firebomb it.

      1. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

        Nuke it from space.

        1. Ersatz   1 year ago

          its the only way to be sure

  7. XM   1 year ago

    Javier Milei was given a star reception at CPAC and bear hugged Donald Trump. Which kinda goes against Reason's "He's our hero, not yours" narrative.

    Milei is an unorthodox, anti establishment firebrand in the mold of Donald Trump. On policy, he's arguably more libertarian and better than Trump. But he didn't win on policy alone.

    Milei is showing American libertarians how a libertarian can win. The lesson to be learned is more on them, not American conservatives or republicans. Given that "American Milei" would make border security his top agenda, the pre mises LP and Reason would have never support him. So he may narrowly lose to Joe Biden and none of his reforms could ever occur.

    1. Bill Falcon   1 year ago

      Reason doesn't like actual libertarians..you need to understand that fact.

      1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        Food trucks, hookers and legal weed, but that free speech and freedom of association bullshit is for those fringe Mises caucus types.

        1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

          Hey! You left out Mexicans and ass sex!

    2. Paloma   1 year ago

      Milei is not like Trump in his policies. Trump fits better the Latin American populist caudillo. They both have some if that but Trump has more.
      Trump is more like Hugo Chavez in his personality. Populist, brash, and gives off the idea he'll get things done. Doesn't care what his detractors think or say or do. There's not a lot of principles involved.

  8. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    Remember that article a few months back when Biden pushed a bill that funded journalism? How about that one where Democrat Congressmen shut down Parlor? How about those 12-Democratic Congressmen who insisted in a signed letter that various twitter accounts get removed?

  9. JParker   1 year ago

    It is immoral that in ANY country, the government spends the people's money to buy the will of journalists!

  10. soldiermedic76   1 year ago

    Government ran is freedom of the press is an oxymoronic statement. It's sad that this needs to be said but so many calling this an attack of press freedom obviously don't get it.

  11. IceTrey   1 year ago

    The money argument is logical the propaganda argument is unnecessary.

    1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      And yet undoubtedly still accurate.

  12. Uomo Del Ghiaccio   1 year ago

    There should not be any State Media, neither Argentina nor the USA can afford it. This would include the Argentine government-ran national news agency Télam and in the USA PBS and NPR.

    It sound like Télam has been infiltrated by Kirchnerists much like how PBS and NPR have been infiltrated by leftist Democrats and Democratic Socialists.

    With advances in technology, there is no lack of private media choices that present more scrutiny of state propaganda. Télam, should be dismantled, split up, and sold to private investors. In the USA, the PBS and NPR networks should be dismantled, split up, and sold to private investors.

    In neither case should they be sold intact which would most likely be sold for a drastically reduced price to the likes of the corrupt partisans who are currently running the propaganda spewing outlets.

  13. markm23   1 year ago

    "Argentina's _largest_ state-owned news agency"

    There are more?

  14. DrZ   1 year ago

    If Telám is that good and the people of Brazil need it in their lives, the broadcast organization can start as a private company and charge people for a subscription. Let's see the difference between forcing people to pay via their tax money vs. willingly paying because Telám offers a valuable national service.

  15. Anastasia Beaverhausen   1 year ago

    I betcha he would have left it open if the agency was broadcasting in his favor. The dude has few actual principles.

    1. Truthfulness   1 year ago

      You're deeply mistaken. Milei has cut many departments that weren't necessarily in favor of the previous regime.

  16. Edmund Burke's Hastings spy   1 year ago

    Pretty soon only 'subscribers' will be able to post here, but who of you says a word.

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