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Javier Milei

Argentina's Congress Passes Some of Milei's Deregulation Reforms. Will the Senate Support Them?

With only a minority of support in Congress, the president had to make concessions to secure the passage of his sweeping reform bill.

Katarina Hall | 5.3.2024 1:39 PM

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President Javier Milei | Tomás Cuesta/Newscom
(Tomás Cuesta/Newscom)

Four months after taking office, Argentine President Javier Milei achieved his first victory in Congress with a scaled-down version of his ambitious reform package. Now, the president seeks its approval in the Senate.

After a grueling session that took over 24 hours, the Chamber of Deputies approved Milei's reform package with 142 votes in favor, 106 against, and five abstentions on Tuesday. 

"This is a first fundamental first step to remove Argentina from the swamp it has been in the last few decades," the president wrote on X (formerly Twitter) after the vote.

Milei introduced the reform package—commonly referred to as the omnibus bill—in December with the aim of deregulating Argentina's crippling economy. But the bill was rejected by Congress in February and Milei was sent back to the drawing board. 

With only a minority of support in Congress, the president had to negotiate and make concessions with the opposition to secure the bill's passage. Congress then voted on each individual article included in the package, reducing its scope from over 600 articles to just 232. 

One key measure included in the package would grant Milei a year of "public emergency in administrative, economic, financial, and energy matters," giving the executive branch the authority to make sweeping changes to the country's legal structure. Those opposed "warn that it enables the modification or elimination of jurisdictions, functions and sweeping powers to control the number of employees at decentralised government bodies," though proponents of the article point out that previous heads of state were granted similar powers.

Milei will also be able to privatize almost a dozen state-owned companies, including the national airline Aerolineas Argentinas, the water utility firm Agua y Saneamientos, and companies managing train and postal services. Nucleoeléctrica, the company that oversees Argentina's power plants, will undergo partial privatization. This is a stark reduction from Milei's original proposal to privatize 41 state-controlled firms. 

The package also retains new labor laws, extending trial periods for new hires and reducing penalties for employing unregistered workers. It introduces a "severance fund" to replace the existing severance pay system and revises retirement benefits. 

Additional measures include a new money laundering law, adjustments to maternity leave, and incentives for foreign investment through tax, customs, and foreign exchange benefits. 

Now the package is set to move on to the Senate, where lawmakers will also review each article individually. Despite the momentum, Milei is expected to face an even bigger challenge, since his party, La Libertad Avanza, holds only seven of the 72 seats in the Senate. 

In contrast, the opposition party Union por la Patria, controls a significant caucus of 33 senators, needing only four additional votes to secure a majority, reports the Buenos Aires Times.

"Argentines who live from their work, those who dedicate their efforts to study and progress, those who long for a promising future for their descendants and the generations to come, expect that the greatness seen today in the House of Deputies will soon be reproduced in the Senate of the Nation," the president's office said in a statement, hopeful that the bill will finally pass.  

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NEXT: Americans Are Still Really Worried About Inflation

Katarina Hall is a staff editor at Reason.

Javier MileiArgentinaGovernment ReformDeregulationLatin AmericaPolicyPolitics
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  1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    X (formerly Twitter)

    Stop doing this.

    1. Rossami   1 year ago

      Why? It's a stupid, ambiguous name. This may feel clumsy but it's unambiguous. And clarity of communication is a valid journalistic objective.

      1. American Mongrel   1 year ago

        Why not go with X.com?

        Or "the website, X."

        1. Zeb   1 year ago

          Or Twitter since that's what everyone still calls it and x.com still just redirects to twitter.com.

      2. aajax   1 year ago

        The other day, Elon polled users on the name X vs Twitter. X got a huge thumbs down.

    2. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      Xitter.

  2. JesseAz   1 year ago

    Can't wait for sarc to blame the Argentina senate here while saying congress has no role in the prior thread.

  3. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

    Wish You Were Here art reminds me of Milei.

    https://www.abposters.com/posters/pink-floyd-wish-you-were-here-v15654

  4. charliehall   1 year ago

    The Peronist ideology of government control over most of the economy, with favored interests getting huge largesse, is remarkably similar to the ideology of Trump and De Santis. The military dictatorships that have ruled Argentina from time to time murdered a lot of people but didn't change this, and the occasional rule by the classical liberal party did not succeed in breaking this system, partly because way too many Argentinians like it.

    1. Jim Logajan   1 year ago

      "...ideology of government control over most of the economy...."
      So to avoid that are you proposing we look to the Democrats and the Biden Administration which you imply have an ideology of less government control over most of the economy?
      Fascinating.

      1. aajax   1 year ago

        Trump and Democrats both want control of business.

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