Jasmine Duff
Jasmine Duff
The left in Argentina’s strike
Jasmine Duff

A general strike against Argentina’s far-right president, Javier Milei, rocked the country on 24 January, just 45 days into his new government’s term. By mid-morning, the plaza outside the National Congress building in Buenos Aires, the capital, was packed. More than half a million people turned up to protest—striking workers, the unemployed, representatives from neighbourhood assemblies, people mobilised by social justice organisations and left-wing political groups. 

Argentina prepares to strike
Jasmine Duff

In a darkened cinema in Buenos Aires, a film about the 2001 economic crisis and the romantic importance of tango music is about to begin. But first comes an advertisement for the National Institute of Cinema and Audiovisual Art, which runs the state-owned cinema. The crowd cheers: they reject its impending privatisation.

Shock therapy in Argentina
Shock therapy in Argentina
Jasmine Duff

In an old, rundown theatre in Córdoba, Argentina, a mass assembly of cultural sector workers and students met on the night of 3 January. Almost every seat inside was taken; many stood, packed next to the cinema screen and flooding the aisles. A stream of people ran to the front to get on the speaking list.

‘We’re not going to take it!’ – mass protests in Argentina
Mass protests in Argentina
Jasmine Duff

As midnight approached on 20 December, people streamed from their homes into streets across Argentina, banging pots and pans. As small, scattered groups marched, they grew and merged, forming cacerolazo demonstrations in neighbourhood after neighbourhood. (Cacerolazo is derived from “casserole dish”, which middle-class people traditionally bang with spoons in Argentinian protests.) Javier Milei, the newly elected far-right president had appeared on television just minutes before to announce a package of sweeping spending cuts and price increases.

Join Socialist Alternative
Jasmine Duff

Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines. The rich and powerful have their own political parties. We need ours. It’s the time to throw yourself into activity and join a revolutionary socialist organisation.

Free Ahed and Bassem Tamimi!
Jasmine Duff

Palestinian civil resistance leader Bassem Tamimi was arrested at his home in the village of Nabi Saleh, in Palestine’s West Bank, on 29 October. Eight days later, his daughter Ahed was also arrested. Footage taken by her mother shows an armoured vehicle with an Israeli flag pulling up to their house and soldiers piling out.

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