2023 Argentine general election

2023 Argentine general election

Presidential election
  • 22 October 2023 (first round)
  • 19 November 2023 (second round)
Opinion polls
Registered35,854,122 (first round)
35,405,398 (second round)
Turnout77.14% (first round) 3.27pp
76.32% (second round) 0.82pp
 
Nominee Javier Milei Sergio Massa
Party PL FR
Alliance LLA UP
Running mate Victoria Villarruel Agustín Rossi
Popular vote 14,554,560 11,598,720
Percentage 55.65% 44.35%


President before election

Alberto Fernández
FdTPJ

Elected President

Javier Milei
LLAPL

Chamber of Deputies
22 October 2023

130 of 257 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout77.01%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
UP Germán Martínez 38.54 58 −10
JxC Mario Negri 26.60 31 −25
LLA Javier Milei 26.51 35 New
Hacemos Juan Schiaretti 3.99 4 0
FIT – Unidad Nicolás del Caño 3.31 1 +1
Por Santa Cruz Claudio Vidal 0.23 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
22 October 2023

24 of 72 seats in the Senate
Turnout78.30%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
UP José Mayans 43.66 13 +3
LLA Javier Milei 25.93 7 New
JxC Alfredo Cornejo 25.62 2 −9
Por Santa Cruz Claudio Vidal 0.50 2 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Map showing the seats won by each party in each province.

General elections were held in Argentina on 22 October 2023 to elect the president, vice president, members of the National Congress, and the governors of most provinces. As no presidential candidate won a majority in the first round, a runoff was held on 19 November, in which Buenos Aires Deputy Javier Milei defeated Economy Minister Sergio Massa by 11% of the votes, to become President of Argentina. Incumbent president Alberto Fernández and incumbent vice president and former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, despite both being eligible for a second, consecutive term, did not seek re-election.

Advancing to the runoff, Massa of the ruling centre-left Union for the Homeland unexpectedly came in first place, winning 36% of the vote, against Milei of the right-wing Liberty Advances, who came in second place, with 30% of the vote. Massa's victory in the first round was seen as an upset because of the severe inflation that took place during Massa's tenure as economy minister, as well as Milei's lead in polls up to that point. In the runoff Milei defeated Massa with 56% of the vote, the highest percentage of the vote since Argentina's transition to democracy. Milei received over 14 million votes, which was the highest ever vote total in Argentina's history. In a surprise reversal of the first round, Milei outperformed polls, which had been predicting a much closer race. Massa conceded defeat shortly before the official results were published. Milei was inaugurated on 10 December.

Observers generally saw Milei's win as a sign more of discontent with the status quo than support for his politics, and his victory was likened to that of Donald Trump's 2016 victory in the United States and Jair Bolsonaro's 2018 victory in Brazil. Milei expressed support and admiration for both figures and endorsed Trump in the 2024 United States presidential election.