The Downfall of the Spanish Armada of Austro-Libertarianism
Oscar Grau, Instituto Rothbard (May 26, 2026)
When Javier Milei took office as president of Argentina in December 2023, the global libertarian movement witnessed something that had never happened before: an avowed anarcho-capitalist became a head of state. Milei had come to power, moreover, having frequently cited legends of the Austrian School of Economics such as Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard. Yet, like any political movement, Mileism[1] would also draw on the ideological support of intellectuals. In this case, these were not the usual intellectuals of statism, but rather intellectuals who had built their careers by advocating against statism itself. From the outset, this posed a challenge to justifying full support for any head of state. And this support arrived. Academic leaders from all over the world endorsed Milei. Nonetheless, some academics associated with the Mises Institute—the global hub of Austro-libertarianism—played a prominent role. Led by Jesús Huerta de Soto (JHS), a scholar of exceptional prestige and Senior Fellow at the Mises Institute, these academics took it upon themselves to promote Milei and his administration as a kind of Austro-libertarian revolution for posterity.
Related
- Hoppe, “Mises Institute: Quo Vadis?”, Property and Freedom Journal (March 25, 2026)
- Hoppe, “Mises Institute: Quo Vadis?: Postscript,” Property and Freedom Journal (April 17, 2026)
- Kinsella, Hoppe Removed as Mises Institute Senior Distinguished Fellow (April 1, 2026)
- Kinsella, Mises Institute Oral History Project: The Lost Rothbard History (2013) (April 17, 2026)
- Kinsella, “My Years with the Mises Institute,” Property and Freedom Journal (May 2, 2026)
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