Opposition candidate Macri wins Argentina’s presidential election

UENOS AIRES, (Reu-ters) – Conservative opposition candidate Mauricio Macri won Argentina’s presidential election yesterday after promising business-friendly reforms to spur investment in the struggling economy.

Macri’s supporters swarmed to the Obelisk in the heart of Buenos Aires’ theatre district for a giant street party as subdued ruling party candidate Daniel Scioli conceded defeat.

Mauricio Macri
Mauricio Macri

Argentina’s election body said Macri had 52.1 percent of votes and Scioli had 47.9 percent with returns in from 91.5 percent of polling stations.

“The is the beginning of a new era that has to carry us toward the opportunities we need to grow and progress,” Macri told supporters at his headquarters, which pulsed with Latin music and was festooned with white and sky-blue balloons, the colours of the Argentine flag.

In a sign of Argentines’ weariness with a spluttering economy, rising crime and corruption, Macri had gone into the run-off election with a comfortable lead in opinion polls over Scioli, the candidate of outgoing President Cristina Fernandez.

During the campaign, Scioli warned that Macri’s orthodox policies are similar to those that preceded Argentina’s 2001-02 economic crisis, which tossed millions of people into poverty.

But with economic growth slowing sharply and inflation running at more than 20 percent, voters were keen for change.

Macri promises to set Latin America’s third biggest economy on a more free-market course after a combined 12 years of leftist populism under Fernandez and her late husband and predecessor Nestor Kirchner.

Barred from seeking a third straight term, Fernandez will leave office with Argentina deeply divided between those who back her protectionist policies and defense of worker rights and others who blame her policies for weak economic growth.

A moderate within the Peronist movement, Scioli failed to win over middle-ground voters after struggling to step out of Fernandez’s shadow during the election campaign.

His talk of maintaining generous social welfare programmes and energy subsidies while making only gradual changes to the capital and trade controls that have hobbled the economy hurt his credentials as a candidate for change.

“Scioli did not manage to differentiate himself from Fernandez and so people stopped seeing him as a change of style and went over to Macri,” said political analyst Mariel Fornoni.

The shift in power in Argentina may reverberate across South America where other left-leaning governments, such as Venezuela and Brazil, are also up against the end of a decade-long commodities boom and allegations of financial mismanagement.