While the presidential race took the spotlight in Argentina’s election on Sunday, the makeup of the national Congress was also decided in the polls. UxP had nine seats up for renovation, and managed to keep all its members while gaining one more. The virtual standoff in the Upper House between UxP and Juntos por el Cambio (JxC) will be over. While the libertarian candidate is set to go to a run-off against Massa, his party made big gains in Congress, taking eight seats in the Upper House having previously held none. The Lower HouseUnión por la Patria: 104/257Juntos por el Cambio: 93/257La Libertad Avanza: 38/257Things look different in the Lower House, where UxP lost some ground despite managing to keep most of its seats.

October 23, 2023 13:08 UTC

The results: Massa took 36%, Milei 30%, and Juntos por el Cambio (JxC) candidate Patricia Bullrich 23.8%. Juntos por el Cambio (JxC) candidate Patricia Bullrich will have to watch from home. The biggest losers were Juntos por el Cambio, who lost 487,000 votes, while Córdoba Province Governor Juan Schiaretti (Hacemos por Nuestro País) nearly doubled his primary performance, raking in an additional 867,000 votes. Third: Bullrich’s inability to unite Juntos por el Cambio and her perceived policy illiteracy. UxP shocked analysts by adding more than 3.5 million voters.

October 23, 2023 11:40 UTC

Unión por la Patria (UxP) candidate and Economy Minister Sergio Massa is headed to a run-off against Javier Milei, early results from Sunday’s presidential elections show. The ruling coalition candidate received the most votes but failed to clear the threshold for an outright win. At 10:13 p.m., Massa was leading with 36.3% of the vote, Javier Milei of La Libertad Avanza (LLA) had 30.2% and Patricia Bullrich of the opposition bloc Juntos por el Cambio (JxC) stood third with 23.8%. The results mark a dramatic shift from August’s primaries when the ruling coalition came third. You may also be interested in: Javier Milei: the fringe economist pundit turned presidential frontrunner

October 23, 2023 06:26 UTC

Argentines finished voting in the country’s general elections at 6 p.m. on Sunday. In the 2015 and 2019 general elections, over 80% of the electoral roll turned up to vote. Speaking as polls closed, Julio Vitobello, general secretary for Argentina’s presidency, said that the first results would be disseminated once votes had been counted in a representative proportion of Argentina’s electoral districts. “Obviously, the vote data will take longer to upload in those districts, which make up 50% of the electoral roll,” Vitobello said. He thanked electoral workers, Argentina’s postal system, party volunteers and the armed forces for their work to organize the elections.

October 22, 2023 23:47 UTC

Updated 20:46The first results are expected at around 10 p.m. — check the Buenos Aires Herald’s homepage for updates! According to the National Electoral Chamber (CNE), 74% of eligible voters in Argentina’s general elections had voted by the time polls closed at 6 p.m, although some voters were still queuing. In both the 2015 and the 2019 general elections, 81% of the electoral roll had cast their ballots by the same time. All presidential candidates voted. In addition to the national vote, citizens in Catamarca, Entre Ríos, and Buenos Aires province are also voting for governor.

October 22, 2023 20:11 UTC





Buenos Aires City residents will use paper ballots to vote for all positions in Sunday’s general elections, ditching the voting machines used to choose local authorities in the August 13 primaries. Once at the voting station, voters will have one set of ballots for national authorities and another for local positions. Foreigners with permanent residence in Buenos Aires City are only allowed to vote for local authorities. You may also be interested in: Voting as a foreigner in Argentina: what you need to knowBA City authorities abandoned electronic voting machines in favor of paper ballots for all positions. BA city residents reported waiting for as much as two hours in some voting centers.

October 22, 2023 02:59 UTC

A slew of international far-right leaders will be present in Argentina for Sunday’s general elections to act as “international observers” invited by libertarian presidential hopeful Javier Milei. Among the most prominent are Brazilian politician Eduardo Bolsonaro and members of the right-wing Spanish party Vox, who have all voiced their support for the La Libertad Avanza (LLA) candidate. Jair Bolsonaro’s son will arrive on Sunday morning and will accompany LLA provincial deputy Nahuel Sotelo when he goes to vote. The Spanish delegation is headed by far-right European Parliament member Hermann Tertsch, far-right think tank Fundación Disenso director Jorge Martín Frías, and Madrid Forum director Eduardo Cader. Santiago Muzio, an Argentine lawyer and member of the French far-right institution Higher Institute of Economic Sociology (ISSEP, by its French acronym), will also be present.

October 22, 2023 02:35 UTC

In yet another victory for the Argentine scientific community, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) was awarded Spain’s Princess of Asturias award during a ceremony on Friday. Earlier this week, the National Administration of Drugs, Food, and Medical Technology (ANMAT, by its Spanish acronym) approved the first COVID-19 vaccine developed entirely in Argentina. Founded in 2003, DNDi aims to find new treatments for diseases that include malaria, mycetoma, and pediatric HIV, among many others. “In our world, in our increasingly hostile, volatile world, I hope we might take to heart another rule every actor is taught: it is all about listening.”The Princess of Asturias Foundation was established in 1981. The award ceremony is held each October in Oviedo, the capital of Asturias, Spain.

October 21, 2023 10:41 UTC

With that in mind, here are 15 points to consider as we approach Sunday’s vote. If that increase consists entirely of younger voters, it will increase Milei’s chances of winning in the first round. In the primaries, we vote by gut instinct, and in the first round we vote with our party or ideological identity. But in the second round, the earlier rounds are not the decisive factor. Macri came second, then won in the second round with a three percentage point advantage.

October 21, 2023 03:02 UTC

Aeroparque Internacional Jorge Newberry airport is functioning normally but with delays after a bomb threat halted all operations for close to an hour Friday morning. The threat, which was deemed false after a bomb squadron inspected the premises, was made against four flights from different companies set to leave the BA City airport for Mendoza. Passengers on board flights ready to depart as well as those in pre-boarding were evacuated, and all flights were temporarily halted as a bomb squadron searched the site. This is the third bomb threat made this week against companies or official institutions in Argentina. On Wednesday, the embassies of Israel and the United States in Argentina received bomb threats.

October 20, 2023 15:28 UTC

Argentina is voting for a new president on Sunday after four years of Alberto Fernández’s administration. In Argentina’s presidential elections, candidates need more than 45% of the votes, or at least 40% with a 10-point lead, to be elected in the first round. If none of this happens, the two most-voted candidates will go to a run-off on November 19. The rules of the eventual run-off are not the same as the general elections: candidates don’t have to reach a certain percentage of votes. Although both JxC candidates combined got more votes than UxP, Massa was the second most-voted individual candidate, surpassing Bullrich by one million votes.

October 20, 2023 13:09 UTC

Economic Policy Secretary Gabriel Rubinstein said on Thursday that the official exchange rate will remain at AR$350 to the dollar until October 23 — the day after the presidential elections. In an interview with Radio Mitre, Melconián predicted that the government would put the official exchange rate at “AR$350 plus the combined inflation rate of August September, and October’s inflation rate.”“It will be a new exchange rate that won’t scare anyone — AR$500,” he said. Since Tuesday (as Monday was a bank holiday) the exchange rate decreased by 8% and closed at AR$905 on Wednesday. The MEP dollar rate, used in financial operations, surged by 1% this week and closed Wednesday at 870.46%. With the election looming large, a surge in the exchange rate would further complicate the economy and the ruling party’s chances.

October 19, 2023 12:44 UTC

Economy Minister Sergio Massa announced on Wednesday that Argentina will pay its US$2.6 billion October maturities to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) next week with funds obtained from the currency swap with China. Argentina had already used yuan to pay the lender in June. This includes an economic program that Argentina must comply with to receive disbursements every three months, which the government uses to pay the previous debt. IMF staff and Argentina had reached an agreement late in July for the fifth and sixth reviews of the program. Massa has consistently held the IMF responsible for “imposing” August’s devaluation.

October 19, 2023 12:43 UTC

Argentina’s Central Bank (BCRA) agreed to extend its currency swap with China for a free access amount of 47 billion yuan, equivalent to US$6.5 billion. What he did was extend the use of the [currency] swap we had already been granted. The currency swap is a currency exchange between the BCRA and the People’s Bank of China (BPC). Economy Minister Sergio Massa lauded the extension of the currency swap, calling the development “huge.”“This is huge news for the strengthening of Argentina’s reserves. Why the currency swap extension is important“The first tranche of the swap was key in maintaining imports and even complying with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) during the first half of the year,” economist Pedro Gante says.

October 18, 2023 19:23 UTC

The decision affects Argentine Deposit Certificates (CEDEARs, by its Spanish acronym), financial instruments issued in Argentina that allow investments in foreign assets. The implicit foreign exchange rate in these operations is called the blue-chip swap rate. Although the restrictions are temporary, the CNV did not clarify when they would be lifted. The blue-chip swap rate increased by 16.5% in the same period. However, after the new restriction was enforced on Tuesday morning, the blue-chip dollar rate fell by 0.5% and ended the day at AR$962.1.

October 17, 2023 22:26 UTC