Against “legalized looting”, against the “chainsaw”, tens of thousands of Argentines demonstrated on Wednesday against the austerity reforms of the ultraliberal Argentine President Javier Milei, faced with a general strike and his first major protest, after only a month and a half in power.
The immense Parliament Square in Buenos Aires filled over the hours with thousands of demonstrators, at the call of the trade union giant CGT (7 million affiliates claimed), a pro-Peronist center (close to the previous government). ), which was joined by other unions, radical left movements and social organizations.
In the provinces, in Cordoba, Corrientes, La Rioja, Tucuman, among others, the Argentine media reported demonstrations drawing thousands of people.
After a month and a half of Milei’s presidency, an avalanche of deregulatory bills, a 54% devaluation and actual or planned austerity measures, “we come to defend 40 years of democracy, to defend the homeland”, launched the crowds CGT co-leader Hector Daer.
“Walking around with a chainsaw is one thing, governing is another” which requires “showing moderation,” he said, targeting the head of state.
“The homeland is not for sale”, “Here, there is no caste!” » “Eating is not a privilege” proclaimed banners and signs against the sound of firecrackers and bass drums, under the gaze of a giant puppet bearing the image of Milei.
“Show resistance”
In the capital, transport, shops and banks operated normally on Wednesday morning. The strike was scheduled to last from noon to midnight, but transport was scheduled to run until 7 p.m., transporting protesters back and forth, before a total shutdown until midnight.
Air traffic was affected early on. The company Aerolineas Argentinas announced that it would cancel 295 flights, including international ones, “affecting more than 20,000 passengers”, at a cost “which will exceed $2.5 million”.
“The country is open, the country does not stop! “, trumpeted Security Minister Patricia Bullrich.
“The mobilization is a minimum compared to the number of people who have decided to go to work” she assured, denouncing “mafia unions, managers of poverty […] who resist change democratically decided by society.”
While unions have predicted greater social conflict around March, under the cumulative effect of austerity and inflation, Wednesday “is a demonstration of force, the power of the streets, the idea is to show what social resistance will be to Milei,” political scientist Ivan Schuliaquer analyzed for AFP.
For the executive, “there is no alternative” to reforms and austerity, to clear the accounts of a structurally indebted country (budget deficit at 2.9% of GDP in 2023, or 1 point beyond the target), and stabilize an economy strangled at 211% annual inflation.
He denounces unions “on the wrong side of history”, and the “fastest strike in history”, announced at the end of December: 18 days after Milei’s inauguration. “Absolute nonsense” while the reforms follow “the democratic game” in Parliament.
There, the government is pushing to have its gigantic reform package known as the “Omnibus Law” adopted, but the balance of parliamentary forces – Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza is only the third force in both chambers – is forcing the executive to compromises.
MPs warned
In recent negotiations with the opposition, he proposed withdrawing 141 of the 664 initial provisions. Privatizations (41 state companies initially targeted), the indexation of pensions, the delegation of powers to the executive in the name of “economic emergency”, the resources of the provinces, are the main points of friction.
The Chamber of Deputies was to examine a first version of the text on Thursday, and the CGT urged parliamentarians “to decide whether they are on the side of the workers or whether they are betraying them.”
On a legal level, the “Decree of Necessity and Emergency” (DNU) published in mid-December, which establishes the general framework of the reforms, also encounters pitfalls: it has been the subject of more than 60 legal actions invoking its unconstitutionality.
Wednesday’s mobilization was preceded by challenges to public order: the unions announced an “uncontrollable”, “peaceful” multitude, but reluctant to “walk wisely on the sidewalk”.
Mme Bullrich promising to apply his “anti-blockade protocol”, which orders federal forces to intervene in the event of a traffic route being cut off.
“If we resisted the dictatorship which was a daily exercise in terror, how could we not confront this clown Bullrich? » said ironically Rafael Klejzer, popular economy activist, who came to demonstrate against “legalized plundering of the economy”.
No clashes were reported after three hours of gathering while the crowd slowly began to disperse from Parliament Square.