The Minister of Deregulation and Transformation of the State Federico Sturzenegger seeks to eliminate around 70 laws considered “useless, obsolete or that restrict our freedoms.” The Government advances with its deregulation plan in the State.
The Minister of Deregulation and Transformation of the State, Federico Sturzenegger, announced last Friday that the president Javier Milei sent the Hojarasca bill to Congress that seeks to eliminate around 70 laws considered “useless, obsolete or restricting our freedoms.”
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The official highlighted on social networks that the project aims to deregulate and simplify the current regulatory framework, indicating that the analysis carried out identified the validity of regulations that date from previous presidencies.


Sturzenegger attached a graphic indicating which presidencies correspond to the norms to be repealed. Thus it is clear that the majority are from times of María Estela Martínez de Perón. The podium is completed with the de facto presidencies of Alejandro Agustín Lanusse and Reynaldo Benito Bignone.
What are the laws that the Hojarasca Law seeks to repeal?
- Isabel Perón (1974-1976): 5 laws
- Alejandro Agustín Lanusse (1971-1973): 5 laws
- Reynaldo Benito Bignone (1982-1983): 5 laws
- Héctor José Cámpora (1973): 3 laws
- Juan Carlos Onganía (1966-1970): 3 laws
- Carlos Menem (1989-1999): 3 laws
- Raúl Alberto Lastiri (1973): 3 laws
- Jorge Rafael Videla (1976-1981): 5 laws
- Arturo Frondizi (1958-1962): 3 laws
- Néstor Kirchner (2003-2007): 3 laws
The minister concluded the message with a preview that more details about the project will be released soon.
The Government gave new details of the Hojarasca law: what are the regulations that it will seek to repeal
He Government promotes treatment in Congress of a new legislative project. It is about the Leaflitter law promoted by the Minister of Deregulation and Transformation of the State, Frederick Sturzenegger. In the last few hours, the official gave new details of the regulations that he will seek to repeal.
Sturzenegger announced last Friday that the president Javier Milei sent to Congress the project that aims to eliminate around 70 laws considered “useless, obsolete or that restrict our freedoms.”
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“The more laws, the worse a society is. In hell you will find nothing but laws” Grant Gilmore (American jurist).
Starting tomorrow we will give more details of the 70 laws that we seek to repeal. VLLC! pic.twitter.com/CkllI0gYd5
— Fede Sturzenegger (@fedesturze) October 13, 2024
The official highlighted on social networks that the project aims to deregulate and simplify the current regulatory framework, indicating that the analysis carried out identified the validity of regulations dating from previous presidencies.
This Sunday the minister gave details about some of the regulations to be repealed. “The more laws, the worse a society is. In hell you will find nothing but laws”he wrote, in a quote from the American jurist Grant Gilmore.
The Government’s arguments to promote the Hojarasca Law
From the portfolio led by Federico Sturzenegger, they indicated that the Milei Government carried out “a detailed analysis of Argentine laws and found six reasons for the repeal of different norms”:
- Laws that limit individual freedom and restrict the right to property.
- Laws that eliminate useless and meaningless procedures.
- Laws that were surpassed, updated and improved by other later laws.
- Laws that are currently obsolete due to technological changes.
- Laws that ceased to make sense because they defined obligations for institutions that ceased to exist.
- Laws that create publicly funded organizations when they should be self-sustaining.
Source: Ambito

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