US politics - the new orange wave (Part 7)

Argentina’s president is idolised by the Trumpian right. They should get to know him better

The Trumpian right seems to be embracing President Miliei of Argentina, but they obviously don’t do much in the way of research. I have listed below what I think are the three main differences between Trump and Milei policies.

Milei has cut public spending by almost a third in real terms, halved the number of ministries and engineered a budget surplus. There has been a bonfire of red tape, liberating markets from housing rentals to airlines. The results are encouraging. Inflation has fallen from 13% month on month to 3%. Investors’ assessment of the risk of default has halved. A battered economy is showing signs of recovery.

However…

  • To cut spending he has asked government departments to slash expenses on procurement, administrative costs and salaries rather than cash transfers to the poorest.
  • Milei is a free market warrior. Instead of industrial policy and tariffs, he promotes trade with private firms that do not interfere in Argentina’s domestic affairs, including Chinese ones.
  • Further, he delegates legislative horse-trading to his staff and asks skilled ministers to oversee the economy — most notably Federico Sturzenegger, his deregulation tsar.
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That’s right. People with nuanced political views don’t exist.

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Was Tulsi Gabbard a threat to national security when she was a Democrat? Or only after she changed to republicans?

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I don’t know…but the Democrats weren’t offering her the position of Director of National Intelligence.

From an apolitical perspective, the nominee should be seen as someone that US Allies would trust implicitly…to both share intelligence gathered by individual agencies under that person’s control and also to receive intelligence gathered by US Allies.

Gabbard is clearly not such a person given the reactions from both within and without the US.

Given the general level of support for Ukraine from NATO and other countries, her support for Russian aggression as well as supporting the Syrian Dictator, Assad would mean that the trust would not be there.
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Former congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard’s controversial 2017 meeting with Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad and past statements on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have drawn fresh scrutiny after President-elect Donald Trump picked her to oversee America’s spy agencies.

If confirmed as US director of national intelligence (DNI), Gabbard would act as a steward of the nation’s most important secrets, oversee 18 US spy agencies and serve as a close adviser to the president.

But former US national security officials and lawmakers have raised concerns that the choice of Gabbard - a fierce opponent of America’s involvement in foreign wars and whom critics accuse of echoing Kremlin narratives - could negatively affect intelligence co-operation.

Lewis Lukens, a retired diplomat who served as the deputy chief of mission at the US embassy in London during the first Trump administration, told the BBC that Gabbard’s “dubious judgement” could give allies "reason to question how safe it is to share intelligence with the US".

Gabbard, who recently joined the Republican Party, has previously said her detractors are “warmongers” who seek to smear any critic of Washington’s establishment.

Trump has also defended his pick, saying that Gabbard - a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve who deployed to Iraq and Kuwait - “will bring the fearless spirit that has defined her illustrious career to our intelligence community”.

But in an odd twist for a DNI appointment, Russian state media praised the Gabbard choice, which only added to the alarm among national security officials in the US capital.

Prominent talk show host Olga Skabeyeva said on 14 November that "virtually from the first days of Russia’s special operation in Ukraine, she [Gabbard] explained its reasons, criticised the actions of the Biden administration, and also personally met none other than Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and supported his fight against terrorists."

For as long as she has been in politics, Gabbard’s positions have earned her praise and scorn from Democrats and Republicans alike.

Her views have been generally anti-war, opposed to American intervention and deeply critical of the US intelligence community.

But it was her January 2017 “fact-finding” trip to Syria as a congresswoman that first sparked outrage - particularly when she later raised doubt about the US intelligence assessment that Assad’s forces had used chemical weapons on civilians.

After the Trump administration launched a series of strikes on Syria in April that year following a chemical attack that killed more than 80 people, Gabbard called the strikes “reckless and short-sighted”, saying they would escalate the civil war and hamper the collection of evidence about what had happened.

The US launched missiles at a Syrian Air Force base where the Pentagon said a warplane had taken off before dropping bombs filled with the nerve agent sarin on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhoun.

A UN panel later came to the same conclusion as the US, saying it was confident that the Syrian government was responsible for the release of sarin in the town.

Assad’s government and its ally Russia rejected the report and alleged that the Syrian Air Force strike hit a rebel depot full of chemical munitions.

Gabbard’s comments, and her controversial meeting with Assad, hung over her run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2019.

Defending her actions, she told an interviewer that Assad, who is also backed by Iran, was “not the enemy of the United States because Syria does not pose a direct threat to the United States”.

The Trump transition team has not responded to a request for comment from the BBC.

Who is Tulsi Gabbard?

She drew further attention during Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, when she made statements seen by some as echoing Putin’s justifications for the war.

Gabbard said that the war could have been avoided if the Biden administration and the Nato military alliance “had simply acknowledged Russia’s legitimate security concerns” about Ukraine eventually becoming a member.

Weeks later, she released a video commenting that US-funded biolabs in Ukraine could be breached and “release and spread deadly pathogens”. It came as Russia, defending its invasion, spread unevidenced claims that the US was helping Ukraine to develop biological weapons.

In response, Republican Senator Mitt Romney posted on social media that Gabbard was “parroting false Russian propaganda” and spreading “treasonous lies”. Gabbard sent a cease-and-desist letter to Romney over his remarks.

And during the 2024 presidential campaign, Gabbard alleged that Vice-President Kamala Harris was the “main instigator” of the conflict in Ukraine for having supported Kyiv’s Nato aspirations.

Nikki Haley, Trump’s UN ambassador during his first term and a politician who challenged him for the Republican nomination in the 2024 election, said recently that Gabbard could not be entrusted with such a high-level intelligence role.

This is not a place for a Russian, Iranian, Syrian, Chinese sympathiser,” Haley said.

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Simple answer is that yes, if someone is completely inappropriate for a role then they shouldn’t be appointed to it, and what side they sit on shouldn’t be a factor.

FWIW, I don’t think Biden should be President right now, either.

I don’t think Bidens selections were as heavily scrutinised as Trumps when he was elected.

some of Trumps are from left field though and deserve some scrutiny.

Maybe that was because they were sensible picks???

Can you really judge if it s a good pick or not until after they have served their term.

It’s no different to saying giants getting Cody angrove at 24 was a bad pick as could have been available in the rookie draft.

When he could be a guy who impacts early like Tom Stewart for cats.

Matt Gaetz stepping down was similar to our efc ceo appointment.

trump will get things wrong like efc.

Wow…that is such a terrible comparison.

Whatever impact Angrove has at the Giants…it will not impact the world geo politically.

If Gabbard gets confirmed as DNI, then US Allies have already indicated that they will be hesitant in sharing intelligence with America…that’s dangerous stuff.

EFC getting Thorburn’s app’t wrong was a costly mistake for the club.

Trump getting things wrong impacts the world.

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She was heavily involved in national security when she was a Democrat congresswoman. If you ignore the Russian asset angle, she is at least moderately qualified for the job.

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Kash Patel Director FBI

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With all thats going on. I sometimes wonder what Pete Hegseth thinks about Tulsi Gabbard? Being nominated for the position of NSI.
Being a woman and a retired lieutenant colonel and all, we know what he thinks of females in the military and all.
Quite interesting how that dynamic could potentially work in a future trump administration.

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I thought people were joking about Sebastian Gorka. That is very funny. Maybe we’ll get a Scaramucci round 2 as well.

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I know it’s a footy forum but the analogies are not good. These nominations are extremely different to the footy draft and footy club CEOs. Of course they are!

To say it’s not is like saying Kevin Sheedy isn’t Bernie Sanders.

It’s very, very silly

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He was the best player available at that point in the draft. Barracked for the GOP as a kid.

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Matt Welsh(a right winger youtuber) has made a couple of pretty good documentary/comedies.

Reminds me of perhaps a Michael Moore except appealing to the centre taking down extreme left culture wars stuff.(racism and the whole trans thing)

funny

and not about sacking people which isnt really funny even if it might be a necessity every now and again.

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His latest is Am I racist - apparently very good

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Yeah i think anyone who cant have a laugh at some of his stuff.

Well maybe you might be too far down the rabbit hole one way or another.(or just take yourself very seriouly)

Same with Moores stuff which tended to be very left wing if you like in nature