Argentine senators in heated Senate debate over 2026 Budget, tension on Article 30 cutting education funding targets.
Argentine senators in heated Senate debate over 2026 Budget, tension on Article 30 cutting education funding targets.
Bilde generert av AI

Argentine Senate debates 2026 Budget amid tension over education article

Bilde generert av AI

Argentina's Senate will convene this Friday to approve the 2026 Budget, with secured support for general approval but resistance to Article 30, which eliminates funding targets for education and science. The ruling party aims to pass it unchanged after lower house approval, while negotiating with allies to protect the controversial provisions. Javier Milei's government views this law as essential for its fiscal roadmap and signals to international markets.

Argentina's Senate has called an extraordinary session for this Friday, December 26, 2025, starting at noon, primarily to pass the 2026 Budget. This law, central to Javier Milei's government, received general approval in the Chamber of Deputies without major changes, and the ruling La Libertad Avanza (LLA) party now seeks to replicate that outcome in the upper house to prevent the bill from returning to the lower chamber.

Tension focuses on Article 30, which repeals legal funding commitments: it eliminates the 6% GDP target for education set by the National Education Law, the progressive increase to 1% of GDP for science and technology by 2032 under the National System of Science, Technology and Innovation Financing Law, and the 0.2% allocation of current education spending for technical-professional training. These changes would tie funding for national universities, Conicet, and technical schools solely to annual executive decisions, without legal obligations.

While LLA has 21 senators of its own and allies, adding support from radicals, PRO, and provincial blocs to exceed the 37 votes needed, there are internal resistances. Four of five Convicción Federal senators will vote yes on the general approval but reject Article 30, as will radicals like Maximiliano Abad, Flavio Fama, and Daniel Kroneberger. The ruling party, led by figures like Patricia Bullrich, is negotiating against the clock and sending key officials to the Senate to secure protection for the provisions.

The Budget projects 5% GDP growth, 10.1% annual inflation, and an official dollar at $1,423 by December 2026, figures seen as optimistic. Its passage would enable financing operations and debt restructuring, valued by Minister Luis Caputo ahead of external maturities. If modifications occur, President Milei plans to extend extraordinary sessions into the first week of January. The session will also address the Fiscal Innocence initiative for informal dollar amnesty, but the focus remains on the Budget as a political signal to the IMF and markets.

Hva folk sier

Discussions on X center on opposition to Article 30 of Argentina's 2026 Budget, criticized for eliminating minimum GDP funding targets for education (6%), science/technology (path to 1%), and technical education funds (FONETP). Unions, scientists, opposition figures like Julia Strada, and some allies warn of desfinancing public systems, school closures, brain drain, and inequality. Officialism secures general approval votes but negotiates intensely to retain the article amid risks of Senate amendments forcing return to the Lower House. Sentiments are predominantly negative and alarmed, with calls to reject it ahead of the December 26 session.

Relaterte artikler

Tense legislative debate in Chile's Chamber of Deputies over the government's megareform amid opposition amendments
Bilde generert av AI

Chilean government pushes megareform timeline despite wave of opposition amendments

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

The Chamber of Deputies' Finance Committee began on Tuesday the detailed discussion of President José Antonio Kast's reconstruction and economic reactivation megareform, amid tensions over more than 1,295 amendments filed by the opposition.

Argentina's Senate began treatment of the electoral reform pushed by Javier Milei's government this Wednesday. The Constitutional Affairs Committee meeting highlighted tensions between the ruling party and allies over handling Ficha Limpia.

Rapportert av AI

The Finance Committee of the Chamber of Deputies approved on Thursday the idea of legislating the national reconstruction megareform project. The initiative advanced with eight votes in favor from ruling party lawmakers, four against and one abstention from the PDG.

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis