18/06/2026 09:04 - Politica
Interior del recinto del Senado de la Nación Argentina con bancas vacías, iluminación oficial, ambiente institucional serio y solemne
After a tense parliamentary session, La Libertad Avanza (LLA), Argentina's ruling coalition, managed to suspend the session scheduled for Thursday, June 18, 2025, delaying the interpellation of Cabinet Chief Manuel Adorni until June 25, 2025. The government sought to buy time amid a scandal threatening to fracture its legislative coalition.
The ruling bloc leader, Patricia Bullrich (Argentina's Security Minister), confirmed the suspension after negotiating with allies and moderate opposition. If the interpellation is approved, Adorni would have to appear before the Senate on July 2, 2025—the same day he is scheduled to present his management report to the Upper Chamber.
Context for International Readers: An interpellation (interpelación) is a constitutional mechanism in Argentina that allows Congress to summon ministers to explain their actions or management. Unlike a simple hearing, it carries political consequences.
If legislators are unsatisfied with the explanations, they can advance to a motion of censure (moción de censura). If approved by an absolute majority, this would force the official to resign. This would be the first time such a mechanism is used against a Cabinet Chief since the position was created in Argentina's 1994 constitutional reform.
The Cabinet Chief (Jefe de Gabinete) is Argentina's equivalent to a Prime Minister, coordinating all ministries and answering directly to Congress.
President Javier Milei maintains his support for Adorni and believes the official "did not lie or provided a reasonable explanation," according to Bullrich's statements. Milei, an economist and libertarian politician, took office in December 2023.
The government assigned Patricia Bullrich, Diego Santilli, Martín Menem (current Chamber of Deputies president), his cousin Eduardo Menem, and Ignacio Devitt to negotiate with allies and defuse the political crisis.
PRO and UCR demanded Adorni's resignation after he admitted to not declaring approximately USD 500,000 from undeclared savings and cryptocurrency investments.
The PRO (Propuesta Republicana) is a center-right party founded by former President Mauricio Macri. The UCR (Unión Cívica Radical) is Argentina's oldest political party, founded in 1891.
"The people have caught Adorni red-handed. What happened is very serious—lying to Congress," stated PRO bloc chief Martín Goerling Lara.
| Data | Value |
|---|---|
| Signatures for censure motion | 120 of 129 needed |
| Undeclared amount | USD 500,000 |
| Adorni's asset increase | From $20 million to $944 million (+775%) |
| Interpellation date | July 2, 2025 |
| New session date | June 25, 2025 |
The scandal erupts at a delicate moment for the government. Argentina's country risk—a financial indicator measuring investment risk—stands at 425 basis points, the lowest since April 2018. Additionally, rating agency S&P upgraded Argentina's credit rating from CCC+ to B-, signaling improving economic prospects.
The Senate was also scheduled to address important legislation including the Private Property Law, judicial appointments, and two international treaties. The suspension delays all these initiatives.
Adorni is scheduled to appear alongside President Milei and the rest of the Cabinet in Rosario (Argentina's third-largest city) on June 20 for the Flag Day ceremony, in a show of governmental support.
Sources: TN Política - Information on session suspension and interpellation.
Alfredo S. Quiroga