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Argentina鈥檚 pivot from Peronism

Sunday鈥檚 election of a president with a reconciliatory style may upend the populist ruling style created by Juan and Eva Per贸n.

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Reuters
Argentina's president-elect Mauricio Macri gives a news conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Nov. 23, the day after his victory. His win ends more than a decade of rule under the Peronist movement.

Political leaders, whether elected or not, are often of two types. They either listen to the people or they dictate to them. For decades in Argentina, the ruling Peronist party has followed the advice of its namesake, Juan Per贸n, who said in 1951: 鈥淭he masses don鈥檛 think, the masses feel and they have more or less intuitive and organized reactions. Who produces those reactions? Their leader.鈥

A Nov. 22 election in Argentina may have upset this tradition of manipulative low regard of the people. The candidate of the ruling Peronist party, Daniel Scioli, lost to Mauricio Macri, the Buenos Aires mayor who ran as leader of a coalition called 鈥淟et鈥檚 Change.鈥

Mr. Macri鈥檚 governing style is a far cry from the power-wielding and divisive behavior of the late Juan and Eva Per贸n. He is a reconciler. The former engineer and chief executive of a famous soccer team promises to change the country鈥檚 political tone and restore Argentina鈥檚 relations with Europe, the United States, and international creditors after years of acrimony.

He is also expected to reverse the practice of the current government to fudge figures about the real state of the economy, such as the high inflation rate. In 2013, Argentina was the first nation to be censured by the International Monetary Fund for its accounting practices.

For the rest of Latin America, Macri鈥檚 victory might help bring a return to the region鈥檚 democratic principles. He plans to ask the Organization of American States to denounce Venezuela for its disregard of human rights, such as the jailing of nonviolent opponents. The outgoing Argentine president, Cristina Fern谩ndez de Kirchner, has been close to the Venezuelan regime.

When he takes office Dec. 10, Macri will have his listening skills put to the test. The world commodity boom, which boosted Argentina鈥檚 export economy for years, is over. He will need to cut government subsidies handed to the poor for their votes as well as millions of state jobs given to Peronist loyalists. (About a fifth of workers are employed by the government.)

The Peronist era of free-spending populism, power plays, and class-baiting may be over. A rise in corruption, crime, and debt helped in bringing its current downfall. Not all of Macri鈥檚 policies may be right for Argentina. But his style suggests he鈥檒l listen and learn.

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