When the world gets closer.

We help you see farther.

Sign up to our expressly international daily newsletter.

Already a subscriber? Log in .

You've reached your limit of one free article.

Get unlimited access to Worldcrunch

You can cancel anytime .

SUBSCRIBERS BENEFITS

Exclusive International news coverage

Ad-free experience NEW

Weekly digital Magazine NEW

9 daily & weekly Newsletters

Access to Worldcrunch archives

Free trial

30-days free access, then $2.90
per month.

Annual Access BEST VALUE

$19.90 per year, save $14.90 compared to monthly billing.save $14.90.

Subscribe to Worldcrunch
InterNations
Geopolitics

Milei's Victory In Argentina: The Cult Of Personal Freedom At All Costs

Javier Milei has scored a stunning victory on a populist far-right platform promising maximum personal liberties and a shrunken state. But the deep rifts and economic hardship in Argentinian society present huge risks for the nation and its incoming president.

photo of javier milei holding up his fist

Milei has promised to turn Argentinian politics upside down

Martin Zabala/Xinhua via ZUMA
Daniel Lutzky

Updated Nov. 20, 2023 at 12:55 p.m.

-Analysis-

BUENOS AIRES – Riding the cult of unfettered personal liberty, Javier Milei, the far-right populist Libertarian candidate, has scored a stunning victory to become Argentina's next president. The rival to Milei in Sunday's second-round runoff, Economy Minister Sergio Massa, called him to concede, trailing by a 10-point margin after nearly 90% of the vote was counted.

It's another populist victory in a major country (Indeed, former U.S .President Donald Trump was quick to congratulate Milei whom he said would "Make Argentina Great Again!"), and defied pollsters and the political establishment that questioned whether voters would elect someone who'd vowed to "blow up" the central bank and carry out major changes to the economy and politics.

For the latest news & views from every corner of the world, Worldcrunch Today is the only truly international newsletter. Sign up here.

Milei had seemingly swayed a significant enough portion of public opinion by promising to unleash a new era where personal freedom would be supreme. Regularly exercising his freedom to shout at viewers, he had declared that, if elected, he would maximize liberties at the expense of state powers. But after October’s first-round results showed Miei trailing Massa, the runoff realized the worst fears of many that a society based almost solely around individualism was here to stay in Argentina


Against the establishment

It's easy to criticize the Argentine republic today, mired as it is in economic problems and unable to assure citizens a minimal level of public goods essential for peaceful living. The economy is in crisis, inflation runs at abnormal rates, the streets are unsafe, and inequalities have ballooned.

Meanwhile, social media warriors keep fanning the primacy of personal rights over the collective. They are aided by the internet’s grammar that allows individuals to create autonomous online networks, needing neither references nor sanction from authority figures on what to think and whom to follow.

In parallel, there’s growing disapproval of established structures — from the state itself to political parties, trade unions, and even courts of law — which acted, or at least were perceived, as representing the disparate classes and stakeholders of Argentinian society.

The discourse thus seems to be moving toward paradigms that assert the individual as the arbiter of legitimacy and reject the "impositions" of institutions. Increasingly, people are intolerant of any imposition. Younger generations raised and fed on social media narratives are quick to reject established power structures and a bureaucracy that many no longer consider legitimate.

Many Argentines perceive the state and its institutions as a tyrant that must be toppled.

In 1548, a very youthful French thinker, Étienne de la Boétie, wrote in his Discourse on Voluntary Servitude (Discours de la servitude volontaire), that he should like to know how "so many men, cities and nations can suffer everything of a tyrant whose only power is the one given him..." It's a pertinent question today. de la Boétie, who died of the plague aged 32, believed the refusal to submit was the first step toward recovering freedom. He urged his readers to no longer "sustain" tyranny with a simple and non-violent resolve "to reject subjection," and "you will see how, like a colossus detached from its base," tyranny would "collapse and break for its own weight."

Today, many Argentines perceive the state and its institutions as a tyrant that must be toppled for disrupting, rather than ordering, their lives.

photo of a woman crying

A Massa voter in tears after Sunday's election

Daniella Fernandez Realin/ZUMA

Meaning of freedom

The coupling of an inefficient state and people's dismay with politics, the rule of law, and a struggling economy suggests that the institutions shaping the nation's life must brace for change. There is an imperious sense among voters that something new must replace the endless, endemic crisis we've been living through for decades. Milei’s campaign, however hyperbolic, tried to latch on to what could have been the moment when personal freedom became the ethical principle on which Argentina’s governance is based and evaluated.

Can people really be free when they lack education, when their health is not protected?

Still, we need to ask some urgent questions about the state of personal liberties given the socioeconomic realities of Argentina.

Can people really be free when they lack education, or when only the wealthy are educated? Can you be free when your health is not protected or if there is no state to assure control of weapons? What happens when the state fails to be the guarantor of equal opportunities? Does the culture of freedom not need as a component what de la Boétie termed friendship or 'amity’? There is no friendship, he wrote, where there is "cruelty, disloyalty, injustice; what there is among the wicked when they are together is not company but a conspiracy; they do not like, but fear each other. They are not friends but accomplices."

We're at a point in our society's evolution when the old is passing away and the new has yet to clearly emerge. The future is open, and the public can still shape it with its long-term choices. These choices will determine whether we have a freer or more restrictive country, and whether we become more or less responsible for our own fate.

You've reached your limit of free articles.

To read the full story, start your free trial today.

Get unlimited access. Cancel anytime.

Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

Society

Iran's War On Abortion Rights, A Toxic Mix Of Theocracy And Demographic Panic

Ending a pregnancy has become a major complication, and a crime, for Iranian women who cannot or will not have children in a country wracked by socio-economic woes and a leadership.

photo of a young child surrounded by women in chadors

Iran's government wants to boost the birth rate at all costs

Office of Supreme Leader/ZUMA
Firoozeh Nordstrom

Keen to boost the population, Iran's Islamic regime has reversed its half-hearted family planning policies of earlier years and is curbing birth control with measures that include banning abortion.

Its (2021) Law to Support the Family and Rejuvenate the Population (Qanun-e hemayat az khanevadeh va javani-e jam'iyat) threatens to fine the women who want to abort, and fine, imprison, and dismiss the performing physician, if the pregnancy is not deemed to be life-threatening. The law also bans contraceptives.

For the latest news & views from every corner of the world, Worldcrunch Today is the only truly international newsletter. Sign up here.

The measures are in line with the dictates of Iran's Supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. He was already denouncing birth control policies by 2018-19, though conservative elements among Iran's rulers have always dismissed birth control as a piece of Western corruption.

Today, measures to boost families include land and credit incentives for young couples, but it is difficult to say how far they will counter a marked reluctance among Iranians to marry and procreate. Kayhan-London had an online conversation with individuals affected by the new rules in Iran.

Keep reading...Show less

The latest