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The shaping up of Argentine President Javier Milei s chainsaw economic politics kicked off this week with the broad approval by Congress Lower House of the so-called Omnibus Law bill, also known for its formal name as the Bases Law: It is a fundamental step to get Argentina out of the swamp, Milei stressed on social media. The Basic Law bill has ten titles totaling 25 chapters.
On the 42nd anniversary of the start of the Falklands/Malvinas war, President Javier Milei pledged that during his term in office “we will have a roadmap so that the Malvinas Islands return to Argentine hands,” underlining that the South Atlantic Islands sovereignty claim is an includible mandate for all Argentines, but for this we need “a country with a vigorous and prosperous economy” and that respects its armed forces.
Taking advantage of the commemoration to honor the Heroes of Malvinas, Milei stressed the importance of a strong and prosperous economy, based on the concept of freedom to produce and trade and thus respected internationally, as the basis for ensuring that claims over the Malvinas sovereignty will be taken seriously, and with prospects of advancing. He said that a leadership that for decades only produced more poor people and made Argentina a serial defaulter, had no chances of being listened or considered.
Argentine President Javier Milei claimed that Argentina s claim over the Malvinas Islands has not been heard internationally given the country s poor management and economic back-to-back failures. He made those remarks Tuesday during the main event marking the 42nd anniversary of the military landing that triggered the 1982 South Atlantic war with the United Kingdom over the Falkland/Malvinas Islands.