Argentina's Chamber of Deputies approved Pres. Javier Milei's sweeping "omnibus" reform package in a 144-109 vote on Friday, capping days of intense debates in the country's lower house.
Though it's likely to advance to the Senate in some form, Chamber of Deputies' lawmakers must vote on the legislation article by article — a process that is expected to start on Tuesday.
If this legislation — crafted to destroy the state in total disregard for its best interest — ever ends up being approved in Congress, Argentina can only expect a disastrous outcome. Now, more than ever, popular mobilization is needed to exert pressure on the government and its allies in the legislature.
Though he has had to scale back his ambitious reforms, this was Milei's first victory in an uphill battle to deregulate one of the world's most regulated economies and reverse decades of government failure. If Argentina has long been experiencing multiple crises, unreasonable restrictions on exercising constitutional rights are to blame.