Argentina

State Media Monitor · Country Profile
Argentina
A free but pressured press; public media under assault
Public media all State-Controlled (SC)
Mapped outlets
Public-media companies, all SC: RTA S.A.U. and Contenidos Públicos (CAI S.A.U.). Télam closed in 2024 and removed. No ISFM/ISF
Private market
Large, pluralistic but concentrated: Clarín group dominant; also La Nación, Infobae, Telefe. Not part of state-media mapping
Public media
Under President Milei: RTA & Contenidos Públicos placed under direct state intervention (to Feb 2027), budgets & staff cut
Télam
National news agency (founded 1945), closed March 2024; converted to state ad agency APE S.A.U.; news function ended; removed from mapping
Pressures
Political & economic, not physical: govt hostility to journalists; advertising leverage; ownership concentration. No journalist killed for their work since 1997
Press freedom
RSF 2026: 98th / 180 (down 11); more than 69 places lost since 2022 under Milei; “difficult” band
Press freedom · RSF 2026 World Press Freedom Index
Argentina: a steep two-year decline
World rank out of 180. Lower rank = less press freedom. Argentina has fallen sharply under President Milei; selected countries shown for comparison.
Rank / 180 · longer bar = lower rank (worse)
Costa Rica
38 · satisfactory
Brazil
52 · improving
Argentina
98 · difficult
Mexico
122 · difficult
Venezuela
159 · very serious
Nicaragua
168 · very serious
Argentina ranks 98th of 180 in 2026 with a score of 52.44, in RSF’s “difficult” band, down 11 places from 87th in 2025 and more than 69 places since 2022 under President Milei — one of the sharpest declines worldwide. RSF attributes the fall to increased institutional hostility toward the press and violence against journalists covering demonstrations, not to any loss of legal guarantees or physical safety. It remains far above the region’s captured systems.

Argentina presents a distinctive case in the regional mapping. Its private media are numerous, competitive and often sharply critical of the government, and the country retains constitutional protections for free expression and a comparatively strong physical-safety environment for journalists. Yet the public-media sector mapped by State Media Monitor has been the target of a far-reaching government effort to shrink, restructure or close state outlets under President Javier Milei, elected in 2023 after pledging to privatise or eliminate state media. The result is a paradox: a robust, pluralistic private press coexisting with a state-media sector that has been placed under direct executive control and, in one prominent case, shut down altogether.

Argentina’s media market is large, pluralistic and privately dominated, but heavily concentrated. According to Reporters Without Borders, the Clarín group is the industry’s principal player, alongside groups and outlets such as La Nación, América, Indalo, Werthein, Telefe and Infobae. Ownership is concentrated among a small number of conglomerates linked to sectors such as telecommunications and public works, with studies of media concentration finding that a single group controlled roughly a quarter of the national cross-media audience, and most of the regulations designed to limit media concentration were weakened or repealed under the reforms of 2015 to 2019. The market is also geographically concentrated in Buenos Aires, home to about a third of the population, with journalism produced and distributed under very different conditions in the provinces. This private sector is not part of the state-media mapping, but it is the competitive environment within which the public outlets operate.

State Media Monitor maps two active public-media companies in Argentina for 2026, both classified State-Controlled, and their recent history is one of a coordinated government effort to bring them under control, alongside a third historically mapped outlet that has been closed. The events of the current administration have entrenched or intensified state control rather than easing it.

The state broadcaster, Radio y Televisión Argentina (now RTA S.A.U.), which runs Televisión Pública, Radio Nacional and related signals, was designed by law with an arm’s-length board intended to insulate it from the government. State Media Monitor had previously mapped it as Independent State-Funded and Managed, but deepening government influence over its editorial direction led to its reclassification as State-Controlled in 2023. Under President Milei it was then placed under direct state intervention, its statutory board suspended and its management handed to a government-appointed administrator.

The state cultural and educational company, Contenidos Públicos, now Contenidos Artísticos e Informativos S.A.U. (CAI S.A.U.), which runs the Encuentro, Pakapaka and DeporTV channels, has been State-Controlled throughout and is under the same intervention. Unlike RTA, it never had an arm’s-length governance structure, and its channels have been progressively hollowed out: workers report that the workforce has been roughly halved, salaries frozen and production largely stopped.

The third historically mapped outlet, the national news agency Télam, was closed as a news agency in 2024. Founded in 1945 and for decades one of Latin America’s major state news agencies, it was mapped as State-Controlled before being closed by the current government. In March 2024 the president announced its closure and its offices were fenced off; by Decree 548/2024 it was transformed into a state advertising agency, the Agencia de Publicidad del Estado (APE S.A.U.), and its news-agency function was declared to have ceased to exist. Its journalistic activity has not been restored as an independent public wire service, so it is treated as a closed legacy case and removed from the active mapping. Reporters Without Borders described Télam’s closure as a heavy blow to the right to information in Argentina.

Across the three, the pattern is consistent: the instruments are intervention, defunding, restructuring into corporate shells and, in Télam’s case, outright closure, all directed from the executive through the Chief of Cabinet’s office.

Public media · Argentina 2026
Three state outlets, brought under control or closed
Argentina’s private press stays free and combative. Its public-media sector, the part SMM maps, has been intervened, downgraded or shut down under President Milei.
RTA S.A.U.
STATE-CONTROLLED
State broadcaster (TV Pública, Radio Nacional). Designed with an arm’s-length board and once mapped ISFM; reclassified SC in 2023, then placed under direct state intervention (to Feb 2027) with deep budget and staff cuts.
Contenidos Públicos (CAI S.A.U.)
STATE-CONTROLLED
Cultural/educational channels (Encuentro, Pakapaka, DeporTV). SC throughout; never had an arm’s-length board. Under the same intervention; workers report the workforce halved, wages frozen and production largely stopped.
Télam
CLOSED · REMOVED
National news agency, founded 1945. Announced closed in March 2024 and converted by decree into a state advertising agency (APE S.A.U.); its news-agency function was declared to have ceased. Removed from the mapping.
No ISFM or ISF outlets remain. The one outlet that had qualified as independent, RTA, was reclassified State-Controlled before being placed under direct government control. The instruments are intervention, defunding, corporate restructuring and, for Télam, outright closure — all directed from the executive.

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