
Sergio Massa speaks on October 22
By Taroa ZĂșñiga Silva
A few days before the October 22 elections in Argentina, almost 90 percent of the polls indicated that the winner would be Javier Milei, the âinsaneâ candidate of the rightâas described by Estela de Carlotto, president of the legendary human rights group Abuelas de Plaza Mayo (Grandmothers of Plaza Mayo). As it turned out, Sergio Massa (of the coalition UniĂłn por la Patria – UP) prevailed over Milei by almost seven points. Massa and Milei will face off on November 19 in the run-off for the presidency of the country with South Americaâs second-largest economy.
On August 13, Milei prevailed over all the other candidates in Argentinaâs primary. In the months between that election and the one in October, Massaâwho is the Minister of the Economy in the current governmentâadded three million votes to his tally.
Georgina Orellano, National General Secretary of AMMAR (AsociaciĂłn de Mujeres Meretrices de Argentina) told me how this phenomenon was experienced in ConstituciĂłn, the area of Buenos Aires where the main headquarters of her organization is located. Sex workers organized themselves to monitor both electoral processes in the schools where it was their turn to vote. âIn the PASO [primary elections],â she told me, âthe worrying result was that the UP force came in third and Milei in first place.â However, this time, âwe won in almost all the schools in the ConstituciĂłn neighborhood.â In fact, âin all the polling stations where sex workers supervised the elections, Massa won.â
The Practical and the Theoretical
Elsa Yanaje, marketing director of the Instituto Nacional de Agricultura Familiar, Campesina e IndĂgena (National Institute of Family, Peasant, and Indigenous Agriculture) and member of the FederaciĂłn Rural para la ProducciĂłn y el Arraigo (Rural Federation for Production and Rooting) believes that the result of the PASO (primary election) was linked to two things: on the one hand, Mileiâs communications success in being the only candidate who reflected underlying anger or weariness with the countryâs economic situation. âIt was about saying what is not said,â Yanaje said. That is, âwhat a citizen angry with the management [of the central government] could think.â
Yanaje said that in the PASO a vote to warn (more than to punish) was given to the current government. A vote that asked: âWhat kind of methodology are you going to use to reverse the situation or somehow guarantee some basic services?â Argentina is currently facing a strong economic contraction and high inflation rates, which have especially affected âthose who were already below the poverty line,â says Yanaje.
In this context, Mileiâs proposals âwere somehow charming,â but in practice, Yanaje adds, âwe knew that [they were] difficult to maintain.â Between the two choices, the leader explains, âWhat was reversed [with the new election results was]⊠a decision between the practical and the theoretical.â The theoretical âwas what Milei promised with his proposal of dollarization, privatization, etc.â When these promises were analyzed by communities, it was evident that they were impossible to execute. This exercise of analysis, reflection, and debate was what led people to take their votes towards the practical: the candidate who was linked to the popular sectors was Massa, with more egalitarian proposals that appealed to more sectors of the population.
On the other hand, Orellano considers the results of October 22 to also reflect a popular rejection of Mileiâs proposal to âtake away rights.â âMany of us were born with a basic right to public health, to public education and we cannot conceive of living without them,â Orellano said.
During the last weeks of campaigning, Milei railed against these fundamental rights, including state subsidies to public transportation. âWe learned that if the subsidy is removed,â Orellano told me, âwe workers could go from paying 70 pesos to more than 1,000.â This type of data generated an awareness that was reflected in recent electoral results.
The Ballot
The second round of elections in Argentina will be held on November 19. Milei, in his first statements after the last elections, declared that his objective is âto put an end to Kirchnerism.â For Orellano, this call seeks to summon the votes of Juntos por el Cambio (Together for Change), the extreme right-wing coalition whose candidate, Patricia Bullrich, took third place in the elections. Mileiâs campaign, Orellano explains, was built against Kirchnerism and âagainst [the] working class and trade unionists.â
Both Orellano and Yanaje are proud of the political work carried out during these elections. In the family, peasant, and indigenous agriculture sector, of which Yanaje is a member, there is no political campaigning, out of respect for the diversity of thought of the people it brings together. However, constant debate, collective analysis, and organization bear fruit. âThere was a reflection on what was coming,â she tells me. âWe are defining the course of the country, so we had to stand firm. There was a lot of militancy.â
For AMMARâs women, they campaigned in their neighborhoods, talking to everyone in their neighborhood. âFor the second round, we are going to be active in all the provinces where we are organized,â says Orellano. They plan to increase the number of election observers in the schools of the municipalities where AMMAR has a presence. Sex workers are aware of what is at stake with these two antagonistic proposals for the country. âWe know what this denialist, fascist, violent, xenophobic, racist discourse represents being against diversity, against women, against feminism, and against the victories of the working class,â Orellano tells me. âSo we sex workers are going to do everything in our power to make sure that the next president of Argentina is Sergio Massa.â
This article was produced by Globetrotter. Taroa ZĂșñiga Silva is a writing fellow and the Spanish media coordinator for Globetrotter. She is the co-editor with Giordana GarcĂa Sojo of Venezuela, VĂłrtice de la Guerra del Siglo XXI (2020). She is a member of the coordinating committee of Argos: International Observatory on Migration and Human Rights and is a member of the Mecha Cooperativa, a project of the EjĂ©rcito Comunicacional de LiberaciĂłn.
Globetrotter
Source: Theleftchapter.com