Abstract
The long year-and-a-half span which goes front the insurrectional days of December Zoos to the presidential elections of April-May 2003 in Argentina requires a « spur of the moment » reading of the current condition of the « new social leadership ». Rupture, dismissal and visibility have been the typical features of its emergence. Although some interpretations of the election’s results consider that these might prove the « neutralization » and the « ebbing » of the movement’s power and its motto « Let them all go away, let not even a single one stay », the phenomenology of counter-power in Argentina shows, on the contrary, that the multiplicity of situations can resist without any need for external organisation