Argentines choose between polar opposites in run-off

Getty Images Javier Milei (left) and Sergio Massa (right)Getty Images
Javier Milei and Sergio Massa have been battling it out in an acrimonious election campaign

Argentines will vote on Sunday in a run-off election to choose the man who will lead the South American country for the next four years.

Opinion polls put the two candidates, left-wing economy minister Sergio Massa and far-right libertarian Javier Milei, neck and neck.

Mr Massa won the first round with 36.7%, ahead of Mr Milei with 30%.

But polls suggest Mr Milei, who has promised to "blow up" Argentina's political system, has made gains since.

Polling gets under way at 08:00 local time (11:00 GMT) and closes at 18:00.

With 40% of Argentines living in poverty, high prices and skyrocketing inflation are by far voters' top concerns.

It therefore came as a surprise to many when Mr Massa, who has been at the helm of the ministry of the economy as the country's annual inflation rate reached a whopping 143%, beat Mr Milei into second place during the first round on 22 October.

Reuters Argentina's presidential candidate Sergio Massa arrives to cast his vote during Argentina's presidential election, in Tigre, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina October 22, 2023.Reuters
Sergio Massa pulled off the feat of winning a first-round victory despite being part of a government which has presided over skyrocketing inflation

But as he was short of the 45% of votes needed to win outright, Mr Massa now faces Mr Milei again in the decisive run-off.

The candidate who came third on 22 October, conservative Patricia Bullrich, has thrown her weight behind Mr Milei, and polls suggest most of her voters will back the self-proclaimed anarcho-capitalist.

And while a majority of surveys are giving Mr Milei a slight lead over his rival, Sunday's run-off looks set to be a nail-biting finish to an acrimonious election campaign.

Javier Milei, 53, is an economist whose anti-establishment rhetoric has gained him a loyal following especially among young voters disillusioned with traditional politics.

His Libertarian party, which he founded in 2018, is seen by voters as untainted by mistakes of the past and much of his appeal stems from the fact that voters are willing to give his radical proposals a chance after decades of economic upheaval.

Mr Milei has promised to replace the local currency, the peso, with the US dollar, and said he would "blow up" Argentina's central bank.

He likes to court controversy on social issues, too, saying he will abolish sex education in schools, loosen gun laws and allow the sale and purchase of human organs.

Prone to outbursts and swearing, he has even attacked Pope Francis, whom he accused of being a communist.

The flamboyant economist, who likes to appear at events wearing a leather jacket and wielding a chainsaw, has devoted followers who mob him wherever he goes.

EPA Argentine presidential candidate Javier Milei greets his supporters during a campaign event at the National Flag Monument in Rosario, Argentina, 14 November 2023.EPA
Mr Milei has gone from relatively unknown outsider to leading in the polls in record time

Sergio Massa, 51, a seasoned politician who led the Chamber of Deputies before becoming economy minister in the Peronist government in 2022, has been trying to convince voters that he has the experience to steer the country out of its economic slump.

He says he is the man who will guarantee that Argentina's poor will continue getting welfare payments and subsidised public transport.

On social issues he is liberal, backing Argentina's recent legalisation of abortion. He has also warned of the dangers of climate change, in contrast to Mr Milei, who is a climate-change sceptic.

And while Mr Massa has been trying to sway undecided voters by encouraging them to vote against Mr Milei - whom he portrays as a liability - he is unlikely to be able to win over a considerable proportion of Argentines who have told pollsters from company CB Consultoras that they are so fed up with his Peronist party that they "would never vote" for him.