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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- Demonstrators hurled rocks at a convoy carrying Argentina’s libertarian President Javier Mieli on Wednesday as his campaign caravan cut through Buenos Aires province, the cradle of the country’s left-leaning opposition movement.
Milei came away unharmed, his spokesperson said, but the attack on his motorcade cut short the high-profile rally and ratcheted up tensions just days before consequential provincial elections in Buenos Aires, where more than a third of Argentines live.
The incident comes as a corruption scandal threatens to entangle Milei's inner circle, including his sister and chief of staff, Karina Milei, who was riding Wednesday in the bed of the pickup truck alongside the president and key candidates from their governing Liberty Advances party when rocks, bottles and other objects started flying.
There was panic and confusion as cheering supporters and jeering protesters thronged Milei's caravan in Lomas de Zamora, a sprawling low-slung city and historic stronghold of Peronism, the populist opposition movement focused on workers’ rights that has dominated Argentine politics for the past eight decades.
“Out with Milei!” hecklers shouted, shoving others in the crowd.
Caught off guard, Milei ducked inside the vehicle as security agents scrambled to shield him from rocks whizzing just over their heads.
Milei’s Liberty Advances party is seeking to gain an edge over Peronism in Sept. 7 legislative elections for Buenos Aires Province and further expand its minority in the opposition-controlled congress in national midterms on Oct. 26.
The elections are widely seen as test of Milei’s popularity and economic performance two years after the political outsider was elected on a bid to eliminate the country’s chronic fiscal deficits and end spiraling inflation.
Opposition lawmakers last week passed various spending measures that threaten to derail Milei’s hard-won budget surplus, underscoring the stakes of the upcoming midterms.
Milei has delivered on his flagship promise to slash inflation, pulling the monthly rate of price rises down from 25% in December 2023 to just 1.9% last month with his fiscal shock program. But he faces plenty of headwinds as purchasing power declines and unemployment ticks up.
The rock-throwing swiftly brought an end to Milei's campaign caravan, staged Wednesday as a show of political force in the battleground of Buenos Aires Province. One Liberty Advances lawmaker, José Luis Espert, even hopped on a motorcycle apparently provided by a supporter and fled the scene without a helmet.
Milei and the rest of his entourage were whisked into a secure vehicle under the hailstorm of thrown objects and evacuated from the town.
Manuel Adorni, Milei’s spokesperson, blamed the president’s perennial enemies for the attack: Followers of powerful former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (2007-2015). He called the protesters at the rally “activists from the old politics” with “a model of violence that only cavemen of the past want.”
Security Minister Patricia Bullrich echoed the sentiment, saying that Fernández's political movement “organized an attack on the president in Lomas de Zamora, putting the people and families who went to accompany him at risk.”
Despite being banned from politics for life and placed under house arrest over a corruption conviction in June, Fernández remains Peronism's most influential leader.
Fernández remains Peronism’s most influential leader even as a corruption conviction in June banned her from politics for life and placed her under house arrest. She faces trials in several other corruption cases.
Public rage over such corruption tainting Argentina’s political elite helped fuel Milei’s meteoric rise in late 2023, sharpening the blow from the latest scandal.
In leaked audio messages published last week, the president of Argentina’s disability agency can allegedly be heard discussing bribery payments made to Karina Milei and her key advisor.
One of the protesters at the rally in Lomas de Zamora cited the scandal, as well as Milei's harsh austerity measures, as driving him to demonstrate against the caravan.
“You never want violence, but there’s so much injustice and hypocrisy,” Joel Domínguez said. “I have a daughter with a disability, and he hits us directly. There’s no reflection or self-criticism because he doesn’t care.”