Anon10/03/25, 01:34No.1444485
While some Trump allies outside of the administration backed the move—former campaign adviser Barry Bennett telling Politico that supporting Argentina is “huge American First project” and an effective way of blunting China’s influence in South America—opposition is also growing in MAGA circles online.“I don't see how bailing out Argentina is in any way America First,” wrote one redditor on the r/AskTrumpSupporters forum. “The argument that it ‘counters China’, and that somehow makes it America First, isn't compelling.”“Trump has made much about putting America First, so, independent of the merits or demerits of the financial assistance, to his base it appears inconsistent with the ideology he’s set forth,” said Ian Vasquez, vice president for International Studies at the Cato Institute.Steve Kamin, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), similarly told Newsweek that this could be seen as conflicting with the overarching isolationist approach championed by Trump, “in the sense that the swap line could be construed as helping the U.S. by helping other countries, an idea that America First seems to reject.”However, he added that, if support for Milei was part of a “prudent, systematic, thoughtful, and apolitical program” to promote America’s geopolitical and economic aims, “it would be a plus for the U.S., regardless of whether it failed some MAGA litmus test.”