Atlas Intel is once again making waves with its Milei polls today. The consulting firm that was accurate in 2023 now shows a much more complicated outlook for the Gobierno. Its recently released Monitor de febrero reveals figures that are far from encouraging: disapproval has risen to 55.3%, while approval has shrunk to 41.5%. That’s nearly a 14-point negative gap in just one month.



What’s interesting is how that rejection is distributed. Among women, the situation is even more severe: 63.2% disapproval. Men still support him at 51.5%, but the gender gap is clear. By age group, the 35 to 44-year-olds are the most affected, with 72.7% opposition. Meanwhile, the younger (25-34) and older (60+) groups remain his strongest base.

The economic factor marks the clearest dividing line. Households with higher incomes (more than 3 million monthly) support him at 54.4%. But among lower-income strata, disapproval rises to 62.9%. In CABA, disapproval reaches 66.1%, although Gran Buenos Aires is slightly less severe at 56.7%. Nuevo Cuyo remains his stronghold, with 61.1% approval.

What weighs most heavily is the overall economic sentiment. 62% say the economy is bad, and 77% share the same view of the labor market. Looking six months ahead, half believe things will get even worse. For a Gobierno that needs to regain support, these Milei survey numbers today leave little room for optimism.
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