President Javier Milei this morning convened his freshly configured Cabinet for the first time since the recent election surge. In the stately halls of the Casa Rosada, the atmosphere was charged: aides say the message was clear — the government is entering a new phase, one defined by urgency, discipline, and delivery.
The meeting comes on the heels of several resignations from senior ministers and the appointment of new faces in key roles. Milei used the session to set the tone: he emphasized that each minister must now act both as policy-maker and campaigner, accountable to reform objectives and electoral momentum alike.
He opened the meeting by reaffirming his core commitments — fiscal responsibility, market openness, and institutional renewal — but also stressed that “the name of the game now is execution.” Ministers were asked for progress reports, next-week deliverables, and tight timelines. One participant described the mood as “no more previews, we go live.”
Among the new Cabinet members, sources say early tasks include reforming the tax code, accelerating business credit access, and setting a legal agenda before Congress formally meets in December. Milei told his team he expects visible results before year-end, not just announcements. “We’re not into promises; we’re driving change,” he said.
Political watchers in Buenos Aires and Washington alike took note: the alignment between personnel changes and policy signals reinforces Argentina’s reform story. The new team seems designed not only for governance but for communication — projecting both competence and continuity heading into a crucial moment for the administration.
As the meeting wrapped, ministers appeared confident yet aware of the stakes. Milei’s declaration: “We’ve won the mandate — now let’s honour it.” For Argentina, the next weeks will test whether the bold vision can translate into tangible results.


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