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Javier Milei sings as the Argentinian economy unravels

The Guardian

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October 08, 2025

Argentina's “rock star president” Javier Milei has been struggling to get much satisfaction of late, as his pledge to lead the country into a new era of prosperity founders amid a wave of economic strife, scandal and public discontent.

- Facundo Iglesia Buenos Aires Tom Phillips

On Monday night the scruffy-haired South American populist - a former frontman in a Rolling Stones tribute band - took to the stage in Buenos Aires hoping to sing his way out of the funk. “Olé, olé, olé, olé! Milei! Milei!” die-hard supporters chanted as the 54-year-old libertarian kicked off a concert at the Movistar Arena, a 15,000-seat venue which has hosted rockers such as Liam Gallagher, Judas Priest and Megadeth.

Milei basked in the adulation, throwing his leather-clad arms into the air, and took a sip of water before proceeding with his nine-track set of mostly 1980s rock anthems. “I’m human,” he told the packed stadium. “It might not seem like it, but I am.”

Milei won power almost two years ago, vowing to save his country’s notoriously haywire economy by “exterminating” inflation and taking a metaphorical chainsaw to state spending. For a while his ferocious austerity campaign appeared to be working - for some - with his success in taming triple-digit inflation drawing international plaudits.

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