A poll shows seven out of ten have a negative opinion of …
Martina Jaureguy
Martina Jaureguy is a politics, human rights and society reporter for the Buenos Aires Herald. She was previously an editor for the Argentine publication BAE Negocios. Her work has also appeared in Página/12, El Destape Web, and Revista Cordón. She earned a degree in journalism from Lomas de Zamora National University.
Screaming and insulting the opposition, the president spoke for over an hour and a half and made few concrete …
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Two trials for dictatorship crimes are currently underway in Santa Fe and Salta
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2023 electionsHuman rightsPolitics
Milei’s denialist claims during the presidential debate met with ample rejection
Human rights organizations, government officials and even Patricia Bullrich condemned his statements regarding the dictatorship’s victims
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2023 electionsNational PoliticsPolitics
Presidential debate: candidates cross swords over economy and human rights
Digital currency, educational vouchers and a cuddly kitty: here’s what candidates said in the first debate
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A model posted pictures and an explicit video showing Martín Insaurralde with her on a yacht in Marbella, Spain
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The libertarian’s proposals include shuttering the Ministry of Women, Gender and Diversity, putting abortion rights to referendum, and reverting progressive sex ed laws
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2023 electionsLocalPolitics
BA mayoral debate recap: sparks fly over Tasers, protest movements and police violence
Leading candidates Jorge Macri, Leandro Santoro, Ramiro Marra, and others squared off on a variety of social issues Wednesday night
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The vice president spoke at a book event in which she backed UxP’s candidate Sergio Massa and talked about the economy
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Alejandro Cornejo is the leading candidate to replace Governor Rodolfo Suárez and retain JxC’s power in the province
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2023 electionsHuman rightsPolitics
VP candidate debate: Rossi accuses Villarruel of ‘infiltrating’ democracy
Human rights took center stage at a TV-organized debate with the five potential vice presidents
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Restrictions on decrees and referendums mean the libertarian economist would need to compromise with the political mainstream