FILE - Argentina's President Javier Milei, right, embraces Manuel Adorni, a contender in the upcoming elections for the Buenos Aires city legislature, during the closing campaign rally in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)
FILE - Argentina's President Javier Milei, right, embraces Manuel Adorni, a contender in the upcoming elections for the Buenos Aires city legislature, during the closing campaign rally in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Wednesday, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Argentine President Javier Milei’s Cabinet chief and close ally, Manuel Adorni, resigned Saturday following a corruption scandal that has roiled the libertarian government, undermining its flagship campaign pledge to stamp out endemic graft in the political elite.
The departure of Adorni — who, as Milei’s former spokesperson, emerged in 2023 as the face of his and — costs the president one of his most trusted and longtime aides.
A political outsider like the president, Adorni became a lightning rod for criticism in recent months as revelations about his extravagant spending and real estate purchases dominated headlines. Milei named Adorni , giving him huge influence over negotiations with governors and other stakeholders in Congress.
Federal prosecutors are investigating Adorni for stemming from alleged excesses of the sort that Milei, and Adorni himself, regularly criticized . Adorni denies wrongdoing.
“For the first time since December 10, 2023, I am going against your wishes,” Adorni wrote in his resignation letter to Milei that he posted to social media, referring to the date that Milei entered office. “Thank you for always trusting me and thank you for supporting me through this unjust, painful and exhausting process for me and my family.”
So far, Milei has defended his Cabinet chief, even as the scandal damaged his government’s public image, constrained his political leverage in negotiations with allies and undermined his communication about spending cuts to Argentines scraping by on salaries that increasingly fall behind inflation.
“Manuel is innocent,” Milei told local media in Spain during his visit there last week. “I stand by my ministers to the bitter end.”
Milei’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Adorni’s letter.
His sister and top adviser, Karina Milei, thanked Adori for his “tireless work” and described him as an “upright, valuable and much-loved” member of their libertarian party.
Adorni’s private life first drew scrutiny in March when his wife, who doesn’t work in government, accompanied him on the presidential aircraft for a conference in New York.
Days later, footage surfaced showing him and his family flying on a private jet to Uruguay’s elite Punta del Este beach resort. Local media reported that he bought two properties since Milei took office — a Buenos Aires apartment and weekend house outside the city. Images emerged of him on other luxury vacations, including an all-cash trip to Aruba. According his public financial disclosures, Adorni earned a monthly salary of around $2,600 until late last year.
When confronted by lawmakers and journalists, Adorni has struggled to explain the inconsistency between his lavish spending and modest salary.
For weeks he maintained he had not committed any crime. But as pressure mounted earlier this month, to buying dollars in Argentina’s black market and hiding $500,000 in savings from tax authorities — a , albeit hugely widespread, offense in crisis-prone Argentina that largely goes unprosecuted. Adorni insisted the money was earned legitimately including through cryptocurrency investments.
It remains unclear who will replace him as Cabinet chief.