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Milei's cabinet chief admits hiding ~US$500k, contradicting his sworn testimony

Milei's cabinet chief admits hiding ~US$500k, contradicting his sworn testimony

Manuel Adorni concedes off-the-books savings the anti-casta government had built ethics policy around; opposition pushes a censure session

Leaders·Shadow· active Qui décide·Ce qu'ils ne disent pas ·8 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

Chief of Cabinet Manuel Adorni admitted on 10 June 2026 that he and his wife had kept "at least US$500,000" off his sworn asset declarations — contradicting his 29 April congressional testimony that "there was never any concealment." He justified it as decades of off-the-books private savings ("we saved in black like everyone"). The admission is acute for a Javier Milei government that built an anti-casta, ethics-first brand. Opposition blocs, including Unión por la Patria, pushed a special session around 23 June for an interpelación and possible censure. Milei publicly backed Adorni but stripped him of the spokesperson role; some floated Patricia Bullrich as a replacement cabinet chief. The case has fused with the LIBRA money questions.

By the numbers

  • ~US$500,000 — sum Adorni admits was off his declarations.
  • 29 Apr 2026 — his sworn testimony denying concealment.
  • 23 Jun 2026 — opposition special session for an interpelación.

Why it matters

Ethics and anti-corruption are central to Milei's mandate; a cabinet chief conceding hidden assets after denying them under oath cuts at that brand a year before the next national cycle. A censure push tests how much of Congress Milei still controls and whether he sacrifices his closest aide.

What to watch

  • Whether the censure or interpelación advances and any cabinet reshuffle.
  • Any judicial referral over the contradiction with sworn testimony.
  • Spillover into the LIBRA case and Milei's own exposure.