鈥淪exual education to decide, birth control to not abort, legal abortion to not die!鈥 For over a decade, this has been the rallying cry behind Argentina鈥檚 , and for the first time it seems like it may become a reality.
Mauricio Macri
Thousands of Argentine鈥檚 were on the streets on May 15 protesting President Mauricio Macri鈥檚 latest macroeconomic policy 鈥 a major loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Mass mobilisations broke out in Argentina over the last two weeks of 2017 following the government鈥檚 attempt to cut pension benefits. Unions, political parties and student organisations took to the streets to protest the austerity measures and resist the battering of the police.
Argentina went to the polls on October 22, in what many saw as a crucial mid-term test for President Mauricio Macri and the right-wing coalition behind him, Cambiemos (Let鈥檚 Change).
In the end, Cambiemos came out strengthened, while the Left and Workers Front 鈥 an alliance of revolutionary parties 鈥 continued to build on its previous electoral successes, winning 1.2 million votes.
Reflecting on recent experiences of dealing with the right鈥檚 return to power in their own countries, close to 100 social movements and activists from Brazil and Argentina have signed a statement calling on the people of Ecuador to vote against right-wing neoliberal banker Gulliermo Lasso in the second round presidential run-off scheduled for April 2.聽
Among them are activists from Via Campesina, the Rural Landless Workers Movement (MST), the Popular Brazil Front (FBP) the United Workers Central (CUT), the Argentine Workers Central union confederation (CTA) and the Association of State Employees (ATE Capital).
The government of Argentina is seeking to take pan-American TV station off the air, in a move the broadcaster said on March 28 amounts to censorship. Latin American social movements have already condemned the move by the South American nation's new right-wing President Mauricio Macri.