Perfil (Sabado)

The death of moderation and the triumph of polarisati­on

- by AGUSTINO FONTEVECCH­IA Executive Director @agufonte

Into the final stretch of the campaign, Sergio Massa and Javier Milei are locked in a head-to-head race for the Presidency. It has been an extremely long presidenti­al campaign, even in a country that has become accustomed to a seemingly constant state of political conflict. To a certain extent, the acknowledg­ement that polarisati­on generated gridlock, which ultimately allowed politician­s to procrastin­ate rather than attempt to solve society’s problems, appeared to become one of the main issues going into this electoral cycle. Yet, moderation was quickly thrown out the window as the emergence of ultra-libertaria­n economist Javier Milei modified the decades-long hegemony between a pan-peronist coalition controlled in some form by Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and an antikirchn­erite opposition that banded behind Mauricio Macri, but that included political groups with antagonist­ic ideologies, such as his PRO party and the Unión Cívica Radical (UCR). With Milei going from freak outsider to frontrunne­r after the PASO primaries, the political field of play has fractured even further, exposing a rift within opposition coalition Juntos por el Cambio, which suffered a humbling electoral defeat that accelerate­d an internal process of fragmentat­ion. Across the aisle, Unión por la Patria has allowed the economy Minister to absorb the Peronist vote while trying to hide the fact that he’s one of the founding members of the governing coalition that also includes Fernández de Kirchner and President Alberto Fernández. Not only have they been carefully hidden in plain sight, in order to avoid “scaring” coveted moderate voters, they are also a representa­tion of an Argentina that is no longer real, with Kirchneris­m slowly becoming a minority expression within Peronism. Regardless of the outcome, the “grieta” – Argentina’s unique brand of political polarisati­on – remains as relevant as ever, having evolved with the consolidat­ion of the far-right, much like in much of the “Western World” (to use an archaic term).

The rise and fall of the “moderation party” is tied to the expectatio­n that Buenos Aires City Mayor Horacio Rodríguez Larreta would win the presidenti­al election. An experience­d politician with four terms of hands-on experience running the nation’s capital (two terms as mayor), he sought to create a super-majority that traversed societal and political boundaries placing negotiatio­n and moderation as its guiding factor, as opposed to the constant conflict that defined the “Kirchneris­mo vs. anti-kirchneris­mo” dialectic that dominated the previous 20 years or so of Argentine political life. He developed regional alliances with governors in order to try and guarantee legislativ­e capacity and was well-known to have a good relationsh­ip with Massa. Rodríguez Larreta was so good at doing things the way politician­s know how to do things that he appears to have forgotten the tricks he learned from Ecuadorean political advisor Jaime Durán Barba, who reminded him that in Macri’s victorious campaign in 2015 he never posted pictures with political leaders, espoused a rhetoric of optimism and used social media to communicat­e with younger generation­s. In retrospect, they probably needed Marcos Peña.

Milei, a postmodern phenomenon who built his popularity on social media, pulled Juntos por el Cambio to the right, allowing Patricia Bullrich to crush Rodríguez Larreta, only to destabilis­e the whole coalition. The PRO party destroyed its two “presidenci­ables” and has seemingly expelled the Radicals from the coalition they helped co-found. From the ashes we see the rise of Macri, who has forged a high-risk alliance with the ultra-libertaria­n. Was this rupture premeditat­ed by the former president? It is clear he had a stand-off with the City mayor, ultimately defeating him through Bullrich, and now, with his former security minister out of the equation, he has looked to regain centrality within the opposition space alongside Milei. Macri has explained on several occasions that he shares the libertaria­n’s ideology, to the point where he caused perceived harm to Bullrich’s own presidenti­al ambitions by compliment­ing her opponent during the dispute for the anti-kirchnerit­e vote. For Macri’s gambit to work, not only does Milei have to win the election, they also have to retain a substantia­l portion of Juntos por el Cambio’s political power base, including a solid legislativ­e position and 10 governorsh­ips across the country, many of them under Radical control.

In the uncertain world of Argentine political preference­s, Milei seems to be recovering lost ground after a surprise defeat in the general election. If we are to believe any of the opinion polls that have come out recently (which we should read only with scepticism) the ultra-libertaria­n holds a thin lead over the economy minister, in most cases within the margin of error. But there seems to be a clear reversal of the post-election sentiment that seemed to put Massa already in the Casa Rosada. A similar situation to the post-paso feeling that Milei had already won. Milei has moderated his rhetoric while trying to demonstrat­e that his La Libertad Avanza coalition has a profession­al team in place, which is ready to take office. The alliance with Macri and part of Juntos por el Cambio gives them increased territoria­l capacity to oversee the electoral process while legitimisi­ng his team with a certain part of the electorate. And the UCR hasn’t gone for a clean break, yet, meaning some of those voters could be swayed that way.

Interestin­gly, Milei’s move from anti-system candidate toward a more traditiona­l stance hasn’t hurt him electorall­y. He has inked a series of deals with traditiona­l members of the “political caste,” starting with Macri and Bullrich, while he has toned down his speech. Irreverent members of his coalition have been told to keep their silence, with the exception of vice-presidenti­al candidate Victoria Villaruel, who is showing that a dictatorsh­ip denialist can still be electorall­y attractive in some quarters. It remains to be seen how the final debate plays out.

In Massa’s corner, the attempts to seduce the electorate will continue all the way to the election. Already the fact that he’s made it to the run-off should be seen as an incredible feat of politickin­g given triple-digit inflation, the black market premium and a host of prohibitiv­e macroecono­mic indicators that the economy minister is supposedly responsibl­e for. Furthermor­e, he’s managed to come out unscathed from the “bandit affair” that saw Martín Insaurrald­e fall from grace for his luxury vacation with supposed model Sofia Clerici in Marbella. A second scandal is at hand with the investigat­ion into phone-hacking against members of the Supreme Court blowing the lid off a Kirchnerit­e ecosystem of illegal espionage that looks extremely bad days before an election. Intelligen­ce reports put together by former police officer and supposed “inorganic” associate of the AFI spy agency Ariel Zanchetta were delivered to deputy Rodolfo Tailhade and Fabían ‘Conu’ Rodríguez, a member of the La Cámpora political youth organisati­on currently working with the AFIP tax agency. The former responds to Fernández de Kirchner, the latter to Máximo Kirchner. Néstor Kirchner was very fond of his undergroun­d informatio­n networks too. It runs in the family.

Massa’s main objective must be to prove that he’s “not like them.” If he can tell the moderate voter that he’s always been against Kirchneris­m, despite ample evidence to the contrary, then he has a chance to demonstrat­e that he’s a better alternativ­e to the dangerous political experiment of picking an anti-system candidate. It is the same alchemy that he will have to execute to tell his potential voter that he’s not responsibl­e for the current economic disaster despite being in charge of the Economy Ministry and essentiall­y the Executive since last year. And ultimately, that he won’t be complicit with Cristina’s judicial situation. What he ultimately does isn’t all that relevant, just what he can project during the final stretch of the campaign. Again, the debate could be fundamenta­l in drilling this final message.

For a moment, it felt like Argentina was crawling out of “la grieta.”

Milei seems to be recovering lost ground after a surprise defeat in the general election ... there seems to be a clear reversal of the post-election sentiment that Massa is on his way to the Casa Rosada.

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@KIDNAVAJO ART
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