Finally, a real libertarian is president. That's in Argentina, where last year, Javier Milei surprised pundits by winning the election by a landslide. Now
Argentine President Javier Milei is facing a new controversy after he made a series of homophobic and transphobic comments at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Argentina's deregulation tsar Federico Sturzenegger, after a year spearheading one of the world's most aggressive attacks on the public sector and red tape, plans even deeper cuts this year, with sights set on industries from autos to medicines.
The firebrand, chainsaw-wielding libertarian says a new axis is forming that wants to stamp out bloated bureaucracy and woke ideology in the rest of the West.
The world is changing, and Europe must adapt if it wants to remain relevant. Donald Trump is just the clearest expression of this. What the continent can learn from this year's World Economic Forum meeting in Davos.
Argentine President Javier Milei addressed the World Economic Forum on Thursday: MILEI: Is it not true that right now as we speak in the UK, citizens are being imprisoned for exposing horrifying crimes committed by Muslim migrants,
Argentina’s President Javier Milei met with Donald Trump, becoming the first foreign leader to meet with the president-elect since his victory last week. The South American country’s president is keeping close economic ties with Beijing to help restore growth, while also cozying up to the U.S.
One year in, “El Loco” is curbing public spending, slashing red tape—and offering his services to Donald Trump.
Their attendance marks the first time world leaders have been present at a U.S. president’s swearing-in ceremony, a historian said.
Little more than a year after storming to the presidency with a mandate to rip up the rule book and do whatever was needed to turn Argentina around, Javier Milei feels vindicated in his tear-it-down approach to governing.
U.S. President Donald Trump drew pockets of laughter and a few moans with his blunt comments to an international audience while appearing by video link at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Sw
America’s political allies may be fretting about headwinds from the new U.S. administration, but for the U.S. financial types here at Davos the news just keeps getting better.