Government accelerates judge appointments to cover 337 vacancies

Justice Minister Juan Bautista Mahiques announced the start of the process to fill 337 vacancies in the federal judicial system, including 200 judges, 72 defenders, and 65 prosecutors. The measure addresses a 35% to 40% deficit in judicial positions. The procedure under Decree 588/2003 has been activated, and backgrounds of 200 candidates will be audited before sending nominations to the Senate.

Argentina's federal judicial system faces a significant personnel deficit, with 35% to 40% of positions vacant, leading to delays in complex cases involving criminal matters, corruption, and drug trafficking. In federal and national courts, 36.3% of posts remain without a titleholder, while in the Public Prosecutor's Office, 174 out of 367 positions are vacant, according to official data.

Juan Bautista Mahiques, who recently assumed as Justice Minister replacing Mariano Cúneo Libarona, activated the procedure under Decree 588/2003 to advance the filling of 337 vacancies: 200 judges, 72 public defenders, and 65 prosecutors. The plan includes reviewing 80 vacancies whose contests have concluded in the National Magistracy Council, evaluating 53 nominations from 20 previous contests not addressed in the Senate, and updating criminal records of applicants via the National Recidivism Registry.

Additionally, a patrimonial and fiscal audit will be conducted on the candidates to verify their financial situation, including tax and social security obligations with AFIP. These checks are mandatory before President Javier Milei decides on the nominations to send to the Senate.

Mahiques stated: “Without legal security there is no investment and without stable rules there is no development.” The goal is to reactivate stalled contests and modernize the judicial system, reducing reliance on temporary subrogations that overload the workload.

Makala yanayohusiana

Juan Bautista Mahiques speaks at podium as new Argentine Minister of Justice, with flags and officials in background.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Juan Bautista Mahiques assumes Justice Ministry role in Argentina

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Juan Bautista Mahiques, current Attorney General of the City of Buenos Aires, will assume the role of Minister of Justice following Mariano Cúneo Libarona's resignation. The appointment occurs amid cabinet reshuffles under President Javier Milei, including a prior meeting with Karina Milei and Manuel Adorni. Mahiques will begin his tenure with a comprehensive review of the ministry.

A group of Morena deputies presented an initiative to amend the judicial reform and postpone the election of the second batch of judges to the first Sunday of June 2028, instead of 2027. The proposal aims to avoid overlap with partisan elections to preserve judicial impartiality. It includes changes to candidate evaluations and the creation of a Single Evaluation Committee.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Argentina's Supreme Court has declared valid the law expanding the Santa Cruz high court to nine members. The ruling backs appointments promoted by Governor Claudio Vidal.

Six justices of Colombia's Constitutional Court recused themselves from reviewing the suspension of three government decrees issued amid an economic emergency for the winter crisis in Córdoba. Only three justices did not file recusals, halting the full court's decision on the validity of measures including a wealth tax.

Imeripotiwa na AI

President José Antonio Kast's government has seen 18 seremis fail to take office or resign since March 11, in under 50 days. The situation has drawn internal scrutiny to the background check team led by Ignacio Dülger, Álvaro Bellolio, and Víctor Valdés. Cases stem from requirement failures, personal motives, or political reasons.

Morena and its allies in the Chamber of Deputies have designed an accelerated schedule to approve the judicial counter-reform ordered by President Claudia Sheinbaum. The process aims to finish before the end of May 2026.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Chief of Staff Manuel Adorni announced on Wednesday in a Casa Rosada press conference a deregulation package including the Hojarasca law to repeal over 70 obsolete norms, the sending of 60 judicial appointments to the Senate, and the concession of the Chapadmalal complex.

 

 

 

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