The climate movement is already a major barrier to improving the lives of Argentina’s poor, and potentially even an insurmountable one.
Argentinian presidential elections don’t often grab the headlines in the UK, but the eccentric character and unusual political platform of the man just elected to the Casa Rosada in Buenos Aires has attracted huge attention, here and across the world. [emphasis, links added]
Physically, Javier Milei has much of the Boris Johnson about him, with a mop of unkempt hair adorned with a pair of enormous sideburns, together with a familiar ability to play the fool while somehow still managing to be taken seriously.
[In his youth, his lifestyle shares many similarities with Mr. Johnson, or indeed an earlier British liberal, John Wilkes, resembling more the archetypal 1970s rock star than the economist he later became.]
His ability to communicate with the man in the street is similarly developed too.
With libertinism running in Milei’s blood, it is unsurprising that his political platform is similarly unusual (at least for a successful politician), straddling the ground between libertarianism and outright anarcho-capitalism.
Ep. 24 Argentina’s next president could be Javier Milei. Who is he? We traveled to Buenos Aires to speak with him and find out. pic.twitter.com/4WwTZYoWHs
— Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) September 14, 2023
More interestingly, for readers here, he is evidently an avowed global warming skeptic, having reputedly described climate change as “a socialist invention.”
Milei, it is fair to say, is not keen on socialism, seeing its prevalence in Argentine society as the root of his country’s long decline from being one of the richest societies on Earth to its current position as a prominent economic basket case.
On the hustings, he has promised to sweep leftism aside, cutting spending and freeing the private sector, with a program of dollarization to deal with runaway inflation.
However, once he has taken the reins of power, the truth is that Milei will have to move carefully. With the Argentinian state living a hand-to-mouth existence in a desperate bid to fend off its creditors, its new president does not have a free hand.
Dollarization has been a success in El Salvador and other places in Latin America, but could still go painfully wrong. The goodwill of creditor nations will therefore be important.
This is a problem because they are unlikely to be happy with many of the other things Milei might do to ease the plight of Argentina’s poor.
For example, expanding production at the massive Vaca Muerta shale play could reduce energy bills (or the burden of providing fuel subsidies), but would not go down well with the green lobby.
A sane energy policy for Argentina may therefore have to wait.
This may explain why the domestic renewables industry has reported having productive meetings with Milei’s energy advisor, Eduardo Rodríguez Chirillo.
One of those who attended reported that there would be no deviation from the Paris goals.
An emissions trading scheme has apparently been mooted too, and an energy transition undersecretariat will be formed by the new Government, or so it is said.
If this is true, then it may be that the climate movement is already a major barrier to improving the lives of Argentina’s poor, and even a potentially insurmountable one, for all of Milei’s big talk on the campaign trail.
Top image via YouTube screencap
Read more at NZW
It’s not likely that an economic basket case like Argentina will be the master of its future fortunes, but a bellwether of voter sentiment is encouraging.
You can already hear the cry of Nazis in Argentina over this by the liberal pinheads and wingnuts