BSS
  20 Oct 2023, 09:16

Argentina wraps up campaigns ahead of presidential poll

LOMAS DE ZAMORA, Argentina, Oct 20, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - Argentina's tough-
talking former security minister Patricia Bullrich wrapped up her
presidential campaign Thursday, vowing to tackle crime, corruption and record
inflation, while taking aim at her main rivals.

Bullrich's rally in Lomas de Zamora, a city south of the capital, capped an
electoral campaign marked by the spectacular surge of political outsider
Javier Milei, who has seized on deep voter content with traditional parties.

Bullrich, 67, the presidential candidate for the center-right opposition
coalition, slammed Milei's proposals -- including one to make it easier to
buy guns.

"In the United States they go to the schools and kill children. Do we want
that for Argentina? We are a civilized country, it's not the law of the
jungle," said Bullrich.

She also criticized her other competitor, Economy Minister Sergio Massa, who
has overseen record inflation levels, as the "worst economy minister we have
ever had."

Sunday's presidential election comes as Latin America's third-biggest economy
reels from annual inflation of almost 140 percent and with 40 percent of the
population living in poverty.

Bullrich, who was security minister under former president Mauricio Macri,
has called for a harsh audit of the country's plethora of social assistance
programs, budget cuts, and a crackdown on crime.

Massa is the candidate of the center-left Peronist movement that has
dominated Argentine politics for decades.

Fed-up voters see both Bullrich and Massa as representing governments who
have proven unable to resolve the country's deep economic crisis.

Carpentry student Santiago Costilla, 21, was in the crowd backing Bullrich.

"In the last few months, I have become a bit afraid of Milei. We need to see
if she (Bullrich) wins, but everyone wants Milei and that scares me."

Unleashing torrents of swear words in his typical rock-star style, Milei
closed his campaign on Wednesday, vowing to win in the first round.

"Give me the power so I can give it to you, so that we can be free,
prosperous," the Buenos Aires lawmaker told a crowd of 15,000 in Argentina's
capital city.

The 52-year-old plans who rails against the "thieving and useless political
class" in power plans to dollarize the economy and has vowed to "dynamite"
the Central Bank.

Milei has vowed to take a "chainsaw" to the public services and plans to
ditch the ministries of health, education, gender and the environment, among
others.

Massa held his main final campaign event on Tuesday, promising voters that
"the worst is passing."

To lure voters he has gone on a massive spending spree, cutting income tax
for most citizens and granting cash handouts to workers, a move analysts say
is likely to worsen the country's fragile economic situation.

To win Sunday's election outright, a candidate must score 45 percent, or 40
percent with 10 points distance from the nearest rival.