Wednesday, December 20, 2023

POLITICO Nightly: Javier Milei’s friend in Washington

 



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BY ERIC BAZAIL-EIMIL

Argentina's President Javier Milei gives a speech after his inauguration ceremony at the Presidential Palace on Dec. 10 in Buenos Aires.

Argentina's President Javier Milei gives a speech after his inauguration ceremony at the Presidential Palace on Dec. 10 in Buenos Aires. | Tomas Cuesta/Getty Images

‘SHOCK THERAPY’ — Argentina’s newly elected libertarian President Javier Milei, who has been compared to former President Donald Trump and ex-Brazilian leader Jair Bolsonaro, has few friends in Buenos Aires’ political establishment — outgoing Vice President, and former President, Christina Fernandez de Kirschner flashed a middle finger at Milei’s supporters as she entered the inauguration ceremony this weekend.

His party holds just 39 seats in the country’s Chamber of Deputies and only seven seats in the country’s Senate.

But as Milei takes office, amid brash populist promises to subject his country’s wayward economy to “shock therapy” and stem decades of runaway inflation and economic stagnation, he has gained a valuable friend in Washington — Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.), the House Foreign Affairs Western Hemisphere Subcommittee chair who has become a critical ally and cheerleader for Milei’s ambitious reform agenda.

Speaking on the steps of the Capitol Thursday, Salazar praised Milei as America’s best hope for expanding its influence and economic ties with its hemispheric neighbors and promoting better visions of governance in the region.

“We need to help Argentina because they are going to be the trailblazers. That country is going to set the course and point of reference for the rest of Latin America as to the way that a country should be governed,” Salazar said. “Free market economy, small government, individual liberties, freedom, private sector, no corruption, that's what we're trying to do.”

She was the sole member of Congress at his inauguration, personally invited by the Argentinian government to attend the ceremony. During her time in Buenos Aires, she made the rounds on Argentinian television, praising Milei for “speaking honestly” during his inaugural address about the country’s grim economic outlook and crediting Argentinians for “not drinking what we call in America the ‘Kool-Aid,’ the medicine of lies” associated with Latin American socialism.

Upon her return from the festivities in Buenos Aires, Salazar wrote to the Treasury Department and the International Monetary Fund, one of Argentina’s most important — and domestically vilified — foreign creditors, urging them to treat Milei fairly and offer him leniency as he seeks to stabilize the country’s long-struggling economy.

Salazar is not a libertarian (though her stances on immigration have won her plaudits from libertarian-leaning commentators ). Nor does she represent a large Argentinian constituency in her Miami-area congressional district — Argentinians make up just a small percentage of the population of her district.

But Milei is a forceful opponent of left-wing economic policy, which makes him a natural ally. During the campaign, he regularly denigrated supporters of Argentina’s Peronist parties as “shit leftists” and promised to upend Argentina’s decades-long status quo and economic malaise. He also promised to move Argentina closer to the U.S. and away from Russia and China.

For Salazar, who is Cuban-American, and her Cuban, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan constituents, Milei is a bright spot in a region that has increasingly supported left-wing populists that are sympathetic to the regimes from which they fled. In recent years, voters in Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, Peru and Chile have elected left-wing populist presidents that have paid homage to Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and Cuba’s communist government. Many have also done little to stem Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s increasingly repressive approach to civil society groups.

It’s the hope of some, including Salazar, that Milei will help change that. In a Spanish-language video posted to social media , Salazar said she hopes Milei will help “liberate” Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua from the “evil of Castrismo,” referring to the communist ideology of late Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

He also represents an opportunity for the U.S. to regain its foothold in Latin America after neglecting its neighbors in the region for decades. Milei has pledged to dollarize, or adopt the U.S. dollar as currency, and has already made it clear his government will keep Russia and China more at bay than his predecessors. In his first international trip after winning the November electoral runoff, Milei came to Washington, meeting with National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.

Salazar says she has had “extensive conversations” with Biden administration officials about Argentina and says they want to make the most of this moment in the region. She points to the White House’s efforts to help Argentina placate its creditors this week as a promising sign.

“Our White House helped him find the $900 million, we sent letters to [Treasury Secretary Janet] Yellen and to the IMF, the National Security Council is talking to other partners to help them bridge,” she noted. “They’re going through a very bad moment, but they are supported, and they are helped by the big guys, meaning us.”

Still, Salazar is cognizant of the history of U.S.-Latin America relations, which has often seen the U.S. miss windows of opportunity to expand trade and diplomatic ties. “Every administration since Ronald Reagan has not paid attention to Latin America the way it has had to, and now we’re all paying the price,” Salazar said. “Latin America does not want to deal with the Chinese or with the Russians, they would rather deal with the gringos because the Americans are a lot better partners.”

“It's like someone wanting to marry us, and we ignore them for years, and once in a while ask them for a date,” she joked to Nightly as she walked down the Capitol stairs.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at ebazail@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @ebazaileimil PROGRAMMING NOTE: We’ll be off next week for the holidays but back to our normal schedule on Tuesday, Jan. 2.

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Catholic Church will now bless same-sex couples: Catholic priests will now bless same-sex couples for the first time after Pope Francis formally approved the practice in a declaration released today. While the blessings are a sharp change in Catholic practice, the declaration emphasizes that the church “remains firm on the traditional doctrine of the Church about marriage.” While the church remained steadfast in its stance on marriage being between heterosexual couples, the declaration makes clear that it should not take “an exhaustive moral analysis” for same-sex couples to receive blessings. “It is precisely in this context that one can understand the possibility of blessing couples in irregular situations and same-sex couples without officially validating their status or changing in any way the Church’s perennial teaching on marriage,” the declaration states.

— Appeals court shoots down Meadows’ bid to derail Georgia racketeering case: A federal appeals court has denied Mark Meadows’ bid to move his Georgia-based criminal charges into federal court , rejecting a procedural gambit that could have derailed the state’s election-related charges against not only Meadows but also Donald Trump. In an unsparing opinion written by a stalwart conservative judge, the court ruled that Meadows, who served as Trump’s White House chief of staff, must fight the charges against him in state court in Atlanta. Meadows had aimed to transfer the charges before a federal judge in hopes of having them quickly tossed out.

— U.S. says it will run out of funds for Ukraine this month: The U.S. will run out of Ukraine aid at the end of this month if Congress does not pass President Joe Biden’s emergency supplemental spending request, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said today. The Biden administration plans to announce one more military aid package for Ukraine this month, Kirby said, but funding will dry up after that. According to Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Garron Garn, the Pentagon still has $4.4 billion in presidential drawdown authority to provide weapons to Ukraine directly from Defense Department inventory, but these weapons are limited by the DoD funding for replenishing stockpiles.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

NIKKI HALEY IS A BOUGHT & PAID FOR DIRTY ENERGY KOCH SOCK PUPPET! 
THERE IS NO SCRUTINY OF HER PREVIOUS RECORD, JUST MORE MINDLESS RHETORIC 

‘TOO OLD’ 
— Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley launched a new ad today calling President Joe Biden “too old,” in one of the most direct attacks on Biden’s age so far in the 2024 campaign cycle , reports POLITICO.

“I’ll just say it: Biden’s too old,” Haley says to the camera in the 30-second ad, titled “New Generation.” The 51-year-old former South Carolina governor has repeatedly needled Biden, 81, over his age and has pitched herself as a leader for the next generation. America is “ready to move past the stale ideas and faded names of the past, and we are more than ready for a new generation to lead us into the future,” she said at her first campaign rally in February. Haley has also floated the idea of “mental competency tests” for politicians over the age of 75.

GOP’S BREAD AND BUTTER — Former President Donald Trump has consistently generated headlines on the campaign trail for his apocalyptic, often violent rhetoric and for extreme policy proposals that would reshape long-held norms of American government, writes the New York Times.

They include his vow to use the Justice Department to prosecute his foes, his statement that he would be a dictator but only on the first day of his presidency and his use of language echoing authoritarian leaders. But those comments are wrapped around more traditional political statements. A significant portion of Trump’s stump speech focuses on core conservative issues that are the bread and butter of Republican politics . Though they draw less media attention, his statements on those issues, which often push the edge of truth, appear to resonate more with his audiences.

AROUND THE WORLD

A protester displays a sign against vaccination reading "Unvaccinated" during a demonstration against the German government's restrictions related to the Covid-19 pandemic in Düsseldorf on December 18, 2021.

A protester displays a sign against vaccination reading "Unvaccinated" during a demonstration against the German government's restrictions related to the Covid-19 pandemic in Düsseldorf on December 18, 2021. | Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images

JABS TRASHED — At least 215 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines purchased by EU countries at the height of the pandemic have since been thrown away at an estimated cost to the taxpayer of €4 billion ($4.37 billion USD), an analysis by POLITICO EU reveals. And that could be a significant underestimate.

Since the first coronavirus vaccines were approved in late 2020, EU countries have collectively taken delivery of 1.5 billion doses (more than three for every person in Europe). Many of these now lie in landfills across the Continent.

Calculations based on available data show that EU countries have discarded an average of 0.7 jabs for every member of their population. Top of the scale is Estonia, which binned more than one dose per inhabitant, followed closely by Germany, which also threw away the largest raw volume of jabs.

If this average waste rate is projected across the rest of the EU, it would equal more than 312 million destroyed vaccines.

Germany alone has discarded 83 million vaccines, while Estonia has discarded 1.1 per person, the biggest per capita number.

 

POLITICO AT CES® 2024 : We are going ALL On at CES 2024 with a special edition of the POLITICO Digital Future Daily newsletter. The CES-focused newsletter will take you inside the most powerful tech event in the world, featuring revolutionary products that cut across verticals, and insights from industry leaders that are shaping the future of innovation. The newsletter runs from Jan. 9-12 and will focus on the public policy-related aspects of the gathering. Sign up today to receive exclusive coverage of the show .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

$78 million

The amount that a trio of super PACs backed by cryptocurrency executives and investors said today that they’ve raised as part of a major new push to influence the 2024 elections . The campaign, which has support from venture capital giant Andreessen Horowitz, U.S. crypto exchange Coinbase and Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, will back candidates who support crypto-friendly policy.

RADAR SWEEP

DEPENDS ON THE MEANING OF VIRAL — Did it go viral or is it just popular in my own corner of the internet? This question has become more and more prominent for internet users as online use skyrockets while our understanding of what actually happens online plummets. What content was viral and what content was not viral used to be an easy distinction, but now, with increased users and curated For You pages, certain posts and videos may not be as popular as they seem. This idea has only been highlighted in recent months with politicians criticizing TikTok after Osama bin Laden’s “Letter to America” was supposedly “viral” on the app when it never was. Even outside social media, streaming services like Netflix are finding their most popular TV shows are completely unknown to the majority of people online. In this story for the Atlantic, Charlie Warzel dives into why “nobody knows what’s happening on the internet anymore ” and why things that are considered “viral” are only reaching a small fraction of the internet.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1990: Protesters congregate outside parliament in Athens, Greece. More than 50,000 students took part in the march to protest proposed educational reforms legislation.

On this date in 1990: Protesters congregate outside parliament in Athens, Greece. More than 50,000 students took part in the march to protest proposed educational reforms legislation. | Aristotle Saris/AP

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