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Buenos Aires, Argentina – President Javier Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza (LLA), has secured a decisive landslide victory in Sunday’s national midterm elections, providing a crucial mandate for his radical austerity and free-market reform program.
The result is widely seen as a significant vote of confidence in the libertarian leader, who has led the country for two years with deep spending cuts, despite the resulting economic pain for many Argentines.
La Libertad Avanza won nearly 41% of the national vote, significantly increasing its representation in the Congress:
Lower House: LLA secured 64 of the 127 contested seats, greatly boosting its total presence and giving the governing coalition a crucial bloc large enough to sustain presidential vetoes against opposition bills. (Milei’s party previously held only 37 seats).
This bolstered presence in Congress will make it substantially easier for President Milei to advance his key legislative agenda, which was previously stalled by opposition lawmakers who overturned his vetoes on funding for state universities and disability services.
Since taking office in 2023, Milei has pursued a “shock therapy” economic approach, brandishing a metaphorical “chainsaw” to slash state spending across education, pensions, health, infrastructure, and subsidies, leading to tens of thousands of public sector layoffs.

Hundreds of Milei’s supporters gathered in the streets to celebrate the election result
Supporters hail these measures for bringing down triple-digit annual inflation and reducing the fiscal deficit, while critics point to job losses, declining manufacturing, falling purchasing power, and an imminent recession.
We must consolidate the path of reform we have embarked upon to turn Argentina’s history around once and for all… to make Argentina great again,” Milei declared to cheering supporters in Buenos Aires, echoing a phrase popular with his North American ally.
The election was held under the shadow of a recently announced potential $40 billion financial lifeline from the US, which US President Donald Trump explicitly linked to Milei’s political survival. Trump had publicly warned that US aid would depend on Milei maintaining his political momentum.
Milei’s supporters welcomed the move as necessary economic stabilisation, while critics denounced it as blatant foreign interference in Argentina’s democratic process.

Milei’s took office in 2023 with a pledge to shrink state spending by taking a metaphorical “chainsaw” to it
Despite the clear victory, the election highlighted the deep polarisation in the country:
Voters Dionisio and Ezequiel expressed relief, seeing the result as a win for “freedom” and a rejection of the previous Peronist model.
Critics like Juliana, a worker with disabled children, and Veronica, a retired police officer, shared concerns about the painful impact of the cuts on public services, low salaries, and pension reductions.
The election turnout of 67.9% was the lowest for a national election in decades, reflecting a significant widespread apathy towards politicians across the spectrum. For now, the strong mandate appears to have secured Milei’s political position and his economic experiment, while markets are expected to rally on the news. The question remains: can the average Argentine endure the continued austerity until the promised economic turnaround materialises?