Javier Milei smiles and raises his fist while next to him there is a screenshot of a tweet of his replying to a post by La Nación about the accounts he has retweeted the most, accompanied by a chart with the names and figures of those accounts.
ARGENTINA

Javier Milei defended La Derecha Diario after an article by the sponsored outlet La Nación.

La Nación published an article full of defamation against La Derecha Diario for telling the truth and not being corrupt

President Javier Milei once again confronted the biased traditional media and strongly defended La Derecha Diario, following the publication of an article in La Nación filled with defamation and criticizing the digital outlet for its style, its editorial line, for telling the truth, and for not allowing itself to be bought by political power.

The article, titled "La Derecha Diario. This is the journalism Milei doesn't hate: libertarian activism, insults, and data without rigor," was published on Monday, July 22, and caused an immediate reaction from the head of state on the social network X.

"Maybe it's because its newsroom isn't full of lying progressives (90%). NOLSALP," Milei wrote on his personal X account, alluding to the ideological composition that predominates in traditional media.

A smiling man with his fist raised at an event in New York.
Javier Milei, president of Argentina | La Derecha Diario

Additionally, in the La Nación article, there is a chart showing the top 10 most retweeted accounts by President Milei on X. In that chart, La Derecha Diario holds the second place in the ranking, compiled between February 15 and July 21, 2025.

Milei's message was accompanied by a postscript celebrating the end of the "media monopoly": "PS: it seems it hurts them not to have the monopoly that allowed them to lie and extort... long live competition!!!," concluding with his classic shout of "Long live freedom, damn it!"

The president's comment once again highlighted his strategy of direct communication with the public, bypassing the filters of major media outlets, which he points out have acted for years, and most still do, as political operators disguised as journalists.

A man with glasses and a dark suit is sitting in front of a laptop in a room with golden curtains and an Argentine flag.
Javier Milei, president of Argentina | La Derecha Diario

In contrast, Milei positively valued the role of outlets like La Derecha Diario, which have gained visibility in recent years with an openly liberal agenda and opposition to the left and its lies.

Meanwhile, La Derecha Diario has a transparent editorial line, consistent with its principles and faithful to the truth of the facts, while traditional media hide their activism under a supposed neutrality that has allowed them to manipulate public opinion for decades.

➡️ Argentina

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