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Argentina's Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (pictured in 2013) must serve her six-year prison sentence for a corruption conviction. File Photo by ...
Echoes of the Argentine experience have reverberated in the U.S. since Trump fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics ...
Argentina's former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner took the helm of the Peronist party on Wednesday, vowing a comeback to take on the highly popular libertarian President Javier Milei ...
Argentina's Supreme Court earlier this week upheld a six-year sentence that found Kirchner guilty of fraud and banned her from holding public office. Kirchner, who had announced plans earlier this ...
Although Argentina’s vice president was sentenced to six years in jail and a lifelong ban on holding public office, Cristina Kirchner did not leave the Buenos Aires courthouse in handcuffs Tuesday, ...
America is still a long ways from that nightmare scenario, but any attempt to follow in the footsteps of past Argentinian ...
Kirchner needs to be centre stage as a matter of survival. Once he has imposed his authority and has the people’s backing, then he negotiates.” ...
Argentina's President Alberto Fernandez, right, and Vice President Cristina Fernandez, attend a ceremony celebrating the 100th anniversary of the state-run oil company YPF, in Buenos Aires ...
Argentina's government is not known for mathematical sharpness. Despite this, a deal is expected to be reached before Kirchner leaves the Casa Rosada in the capital city next year.
Kirchner's move to nationalize Argentina's energy company sparked worry, but she's confident her country will support her just as it did the famed populist leader ...
Argentina represents the second or third largest economy in South America (depending on how one estimates such things), with strong cultural and family links to Latin Europe. Its capital, Buenos ...