The midterms are now only a fortnight away and the electorate has yet to be offered something for which to vote between a government with plummetting credibility and a populist ideology with a track record of decades of decline, along with an excess of other options freed from any PASO primary filter. The warcries on both sides of “libertad o kirchnerismo” and variations on stopping President Javier Milei both appeal to negative voting. To that should be added the prospects of random voting from the unknown factor of the innovative single paper ballot – if G.K. Chesterton said that people who believe in nothing end up believing in anything, the systematically sceptical Argentine
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