Argentina's President weighs next steps after economic reform bill setback
The Hindu
The government of Argentine President Javier Milei was seeking to salvage his wide-ranging economic reform package after Congress delivered a major blow a day earlier, casting doubt over its future and triggering a fall in financial markets.
The government of Argentine President Javier Milei was seeking to salvage his wide-ranging economic reform package after Congress delivered a major blow a day earlier, casting doubt over its future and triggering a fall in financial markets.
Lower house lawmakers rejected several crucial proposals in the bill, sending it back to committee and back to the drawing board.
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The government said it was seeking ways to keep the bill alive.
"All constitutional tools are being evaluated," presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni said at a news conference on Wednesday. "At some point the law is going to become a reality."
Mr. Milei's so-called "omnibus" bill, which had already been significantly reworked by lawmakers before Tuesday's defeat, included provisions to allow for the privatization of state entities and give the president greater powers, among changes to hundreds of regulations.
The government was now weighing whether to break it up into separate bills, ruling party lawmaker Oscar Zago said in an interview on local radio station Urbana.













