Orlando Sentinel

Argentina’s newly elected leader

vows to end support for Venezuela’s leftist leaders.

- By Andres D’Alessandro and Chris Kraul Special correspond­ents Andres D’Alessandro reported from Buenos Aires and Chris Kraul from Bogota, Colombia.

BUENOS AIRES — Sweeping changes lie ahead for Argentina’s economy and foreign policy, including an end to protection­ism and unquestion­ed support for the leftist government in Venezuela, President-elect Mauricio Macri told reporters Monday.

Macri spoke in Buenos Aires at his first news conference after winning Sunday’s runoff election against Daniel Scioli.

The victory marks the end of 12 years of Kirchneris­mo, the populist leftleanin­g politics of outgoing President Cristina Fernandez and her late husband and predecesso­r, Nestor Kirchner.

Macri said he will implement spending cuts and a slate of free-market policies that will reverse the controls on the economy instituted by Fernandez.

Her populist programs sought to keep a lid on domestic prices by shutting off access to foreign markets for Argentine producers of staples such as beef, corn and wheat.

But critics say such controls distorted the economy, stunted exports and scared away foreign investors.

Addressing a primary voter concern, Macri said he will declare a state of emergency against the “unpardonab­le” rise in violent crime across Argentina spurred by an increase in drug use and traffickin­g. Policing techniques that he said brought crime down in the capital, where he has served as mayor since 2007, will be instituted.

“It’s a pressing need that we advance profession­alism of the nation’s security forces, just as we accomplish­ed it here in the metropolit­an force,” Macri said.

Although Macri promised to rein in government spending that will produce a 7 percent fiscal deficit this year, he has also vowed to retain her expanded social programs that include education subsidies, pensions and senior citizen care.

The 56-year-old former soccer club president beat Scioli, the governor of Buenos Aires state, by 51.4 percent to 48.6 percent, with a relatively high turnout of 82 percent.

Macri will meet with Fernandez on Tuesday to begin the transition before taking office Dec. 10.

The incoming president faces serious challenges implementi­ng his proposals as his coalition of parties called Change controls only a minority of seats in both houses of Congress.

Macri served notice that Argentina’s close relationsh­ip with the leftist government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro may be coming to an end. He voiced support for opposition politician­s, including former Caracas borough Mayor Leopoldo Lopez, jailed since 2014 on what critics maintain are trumped-up charges.

He said he would also propose that Mercosur, the trade bloc of South American nations, suspend Venezuela for its “undemocrat­ic” actions against opposition politician­s.

Argentina’s confusing currency policy is also coming to an end, with Macri promising a “single exchange rate.” The government currently enforces an official exchange rate between the peso and dollar that is below the unofficial black market rate. Macri has called the policy, intended to contain inflation, “an error.”

Many Argentine farmers who opposed Fernandez’s restrictio­ns on their access to foreign markets applauded Macri’s election. They hope it will usher in a period of dialogue with farmers and better access to internatio­nal markets.

Macri also said he would nullify a memorandum of understand­ing that Fernandez signed with Iranian officials in which she promised to try to lift an Interpol arrest order for 10 Iranians wanted in connection with the 1994 bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Buenos Aires that killed 85.

A civil engineer by profession, the president-elect hails from the city of Tandil in Buenos Aires state and is the son of one the country’s richest men, Franco Macri, a constructi­on magnate.

 ?? SILVINA FRYDLEWSKY/EPA ?? Mauricio Macri celebrates victory next to his wife, Juliana Awada, and daughter Antonia, on Sunday in Buenos Aires.
SILVINA FRYDLEWSKY/EPA Mauricio Macri celebrates victory next to his wife, Juliana Awada, and daughter Antonia, on Sunday in Buenos Aires.

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