Personnel is Policy: Why Argentina’s Latest Supreme Court Nominee Threatens Anticorruption Efforts

Last November, Javier Milei, a former economics professor and political outsider, won the presidency of Argentina, riding a wave of popular outrage against the political elite. The roots of that outrage are not hard to understand: Argentina is in the midst of a historic economic crisis, with out-of-control inflation and skyrocketing poverty. And many believe, with some justification, that Argentina’s deep-rooted political corruption is partly to blame. Argentina has been rocked by a series of corruption scandals, several of which have been documented on this blog (see here, here, and here). In campaigning on a platform of radical economic reform, Milei promised to take on the “parasites” and “thieves” who comprise the corrupt elite. After Milei’s victory, he immediately faced a problem in advancing his policy agenda: his newly-created party won just 44 out of 329 seats in Congress. That left Milei with two options: He could either take the traditional route of trying to form alliances with other parties to get some form of compromise reform package through Congress, or he could push the constitutional envelope by trying to enact aggressive reforms through executive fiat. Milei has chosen the latter path. This is not surprising: He was always going to face an uphill battle getting Congress onboard with his aggressive reforms, as there are simply too many entrenched interests, and Milei himself is an exceptionally polarizing figure. But pushing through radical reforms without congressional consent will require approval of the Supreme Court, an institution deeply embedded in the political caste.

In seeking to secure Supreme Court approval of his attempt to radically restructure the economy by executive fiat, Milei appears poised to make Argentina’s corruption problem even worse. Many observers believe that one of Argentina’s current Justices—a savvy political power player named Ricardo Lorenzetti—offered Milei a deal: If Milei would appoint Lorenzetti’s allies to fill the two vacant seats on the Court—which would give Lorenzetti’s faction a majority—Lorenzetti would use his influence to ensure favorable judicial treatment of Milei’s aggressive reforms in the justice system. One of the two nominees that Milei has put forward, a Lorenzetti ally named Ariel Lijo, is one of the Argentine judiciary’s most notoriously corrupt figures. One can see why Milei was tempted to stack the Court with Justices who would reliably side with him, but this is a Faustian bargain that poses a grave and long-term danger to anticorruption efforts in Argentina.

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Guest Post: How a Social Movement Changed Spanish Attitudes Toward Corruption

Today’s guest post is from Elisa Elliott Alonso, who works at the OECD Water Governance Program:

The graph below chronicles the percentage of Spanish Citizens who named the economy (grey line) and fraud/corruption (blue line) as one of the three most important problems facing the country, during the period leading up to and following the economic downturn of 2008. Unsurprisingly, after the Spanish economy crashed, some 50% of the citizens of Spain noted that the economy was one of the most important issue affecting them, and this concern remained predominant for the next three years, though it started to decline a bit after 2011. As for corruption and fraud, prior to the crash concerns about these issues hardly registered, except for a brief spike in 1993, an uptick came in the immediate aftermath of a slew of highly publicized corruption scandals, and dissipated quickly) Even after the 2008 crash, concern about corruption rose only slightly increased from 2008 to 2012. That big change came in 2013, when the news broke that important members of the conservative PP party were allegedly involved in the Gürtel case, one of the most serious recent corruption scandals to rock Spain. More interesting is the fact that Corruption has remained a top concern of Spanish citizens ever since. There’s been a bit of tapering off since concern over corruption reached its peak in late 2014, but more than 20% of Spanish citizens still list corruption as one of the country’s most serious problems, roughly the same number of name the economy.

Why is this? Or, to put the question more generally, what kind of changes need to take place within a collective society’s ethos in order to bring about engaged citizen awareness and opposition to corrupt activities? Continue reading