The whacky Argentine president has ramped up the rhetoric over the Falklands after being branded a "traitor" last week by his ...
Read our full cover story on Javier Milei here. You can also read the transcript of the interview in Spanish here. Argentina’s President Javier Milei sat down for an interview with TIME in his ...
The Falkland Islands are still in British hands, Argentinian president Javier Milei has admitted in an interview with the BBC. The right-wing politician, who made headlines across the world ...
The Falkland Islands are British, Javier Milei, Argentina’s President, has admitted in a remarkable turnaround from the country’s previous position. However, the right-winger has said he ...
Argentina’s president Javier Milei has accepted that the Falkland Islands remain in the hands of the British – for now – and has spoken of his admiration for the “brilliant” Margaret ...
A book presentation about neoclassical economic theory may not sound like a crowd-pleaser. But on Wednesday in Buenos Aires mobs of star-struck fans packed a giant auditorium to hear Argentina's ...
Argentine President Javier Milei insisted Monday that he intends to recover the Falkland/Malvinas Islands through diplomatic means but admitted it would be “a long process.” “My ally is the ...
Javier Milei has started his libertarian economic experiment to transform Argentina. In a series of dispatches, The Telegraph’s World Economy Editor, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, travels through ...
During an interview with the BBC, Argentina’s President says that he will never renounce his nation’s sovereignty claim over disputed Malvinas (Falkland) Islands, but admits “there is no immediate ...
President Javier Milei hates his new office. The Casa Rosada, with its historic blue chair and ornate paneled walls, feels tainted by his predecessors, who he believes drove Argentina into ruin.
Argentine President Javier Milei warned Thursday that his entire cabinet will be under review depending on the result of his pro-business reform bill grinding its way through Congress. Newspapers ...