From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Argentina’s Labor Leaders Warn of Resistance to President-Elect
Date November 25, 2023 1:40 AM
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[Argentina’s unions and social organizations are vowing pushback
and protests if Right-wing populist President Javier Milei makes good
on his promises to slash the size of the state and privatize
companies]
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ARGENTINA’S LABOR LEADERS WARN OF RESISTANCE TO PRESIDENT-ELECT  
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Daniel Politi
November 23, 2023
Associated Press
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_ Argentina’s unions and social organizations are vowing pushback
and protests if Right-wing populist President Javier Milei makes good
on his promises to slash the size of the state and privatize companies
_

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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- Right-wing populist Javier Milei has been
president-elect just four days and already Argentina’s unions and
social organizations are vowing pushback and even protests if he makes
good on his promises to slash the size of the state and privatize
companies.

Milei, who famously campaigned with a revving chainsaw to demonstrate
what he would do to public spending, says radical measures are needed
to get the South American country’s moribund economy back to life
and reduce annual inflation of 140%.

The day after winning the election
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margin, 56% to 44%, the libertarian said in a radio interview that
"everything that can be in the hands of the private sector will be in
the hands of the private sector.” He has said he wants to privatize
state-owned media companies and state-run oil and gas firms, and has
raised the possibility of privatizing water distribution and train
service, as well as ending all public works.

Labor union leaders said Thursday they are paying close attention to
what the libertarian president-elect says and what they are hearing is
in opposition to their interests.

“We clearly have as a central idea for the country development, with
production and the creation of jobs, and it seems that all (Milei's)
affirmations about cuts in the economy, about privatizations and other
things do not go down this path,” Héctor Dear, the secretary
general of the powerful General Confederation of Labor umbrella
organization, said following a meeting with labor leaders.

The most emphatic opposition so far to Milei’s privatization plans
came from the head of the Airline Pilots Association, Pablo Biró, who
said Wednesday that Milei “will have to literally kill us” to go
through with his plan to change the ownership structure of state-owned
airline Aerolineas Argentinas.

Most labor leaders, however, have emphasized a wait-and-see attitude,
saying they’re on alert but recognize Argentines voted for Milei and
will wait for him to implement policies.

“In the moment they move forward with reforms related to labor
rights, both individual and collective, and when the labor
organizations affected by these adjustments request it, the CGT will
take a stance,” Dear said.

Some, however, made clear the resistance has already started.

“We cannot wait to see if this man succeeds,” Daniel Catalano,
secretary general of the State Workers’ Association, said during the
march by the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo. “We expect absolutely nothing
from Javier Milei.”

Catalano was one of the representatives of labor unions and social
organizations who joined the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo in their weekly
march in downtown Buenos Aires Thursday.

The weekly event by the human rights group made up of mothers of
children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship
(1976-1983) took on a different tone Thursday as groups called on
supporters to join the mothers to symbolically represent opposition to
Milei’s government.

There’s also concern among human rights organizations about a
potential setback in policies that allowed for the prosecution of
perpetrators of crimes against humanity during the dictatorship.

Leaders of leftist social organizations also held a meeting Thursday
to discuss their response to Milei’s policies and “a plan for
struggle against austerity” that will involve street protests.

Milei has warned of inevitable pain ahead as a result of his policies,
repeatedly saying that “there is no money,” noting “it’s
likely we’ll have to endure six tough months, but they will be the
foundation for Argentina’s takeoff.”

He has also recognized there’s likely to be protests as a response
to his policies.

“The law will be applied, and I will not let myself be extorted,”
he said.

Milei will “probably want to carry out the privatizations fairly
quickly,” said Nicolás Saldías, senior analyst at the Economist
Intelligence Unit for Latin America and the Caribbean, who warned that
“a lot of social protest” may very well be inevitable.

“A lot of labor unions are highly mobilized, this is a high stakes
situation for them,” Sadias added, noting that “Milei is going to
face a lot of resistance on the streets.”

Argentina has a long tradition of labor unions and powerful social
organizations that block roads and carry out strikes to protest as a
way to pressure the government to heed their demands, and respecting
the right to protest has been a hallmark of most of the governments
that have ruled the country over the past two decades.

In addition, due to a history of violent response to these protests
that have included deaths, law enforcement is often hesitant to break
them up.

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Associated Press writer Débora Rey contributed to this report.

* Argentina
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* Javier Milei
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