Article 6FTB0 Tuesday briefing: How Argentina punctured far-right populism’s rise in South America

Tuesday briefing: How Argentina punctured far-right populism’s rise in South America

by
Rupert Neate
from World news | The Guardian on (#6FTB0)

In today's newsletter: Javier Milei was expected to top the first round of voting in the presidential election, but the country picked the centrist candidate

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Good morning. Today we're heading to Buenos Aires, where left-wing and centrist Argentinians have taken to the streets celebrating that the country may be about to avoid electing a far-right president described by some as a mashup of Donald Trump, Boris Johnson and The X-Men's Wolverine - who describes himself as anarcho-capitalist".

Until the results of the first round of Argentina's presidential election trickled out early yesterday morning, the polls and the pundits had predicted that eccentric far-right populist Javier Milei - whose signature mop of untamed hair and long sideburns is a professionally designed homage to Elvis and the aforementioned superhero - would probably become the country's next president.

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