Argentina. It Is Not Cristina, It Is Not Milei - Latin American Summary
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Álvaro Verzi Rangel and Rubén Armendáriz Javier Milei returned to the country after another tour abroad—which included his support for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the genocide of Palestinians—but he met another Argentina, where questions were raised about his own future, both judicial and electoral: In the interim of his trip, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the top leader of the most powerful opposition force, was ba…
By Laura Tafferani, Latin American Summary, June 14, 2025. Argentina after the 1976 military coup, once the highest mass boom in its history was buried and the revolutionary organizations that had emerged defeated, begins to transit “democracy” in concert between the armed forces and the whole of [...] La entrada Argentina. No es Cristina, no es Milei se publicado primero en Summaryo Latinoamericano.
Argentina, after the 1976 military coup, once the highest mass boom in its history was buried and the revolutionary organizations that had emerged defeated, began to move through “democracy” in a concerted manner between the armed forces and the whole of conservative and social democratic political forces that could guarantee the transition. With the clear terrain of popular resistances that could oppose, the process of deepening the capitalist …
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