Amado Boudou set to be Argentina's first rock'n'roll vice-president

President Cristina Kirchner's running mate for October's election uses a Fender Telecaster guitar to get his message across
Amado Boudou
Argentina's economy minister, Amado Boudou, has been campaigning in the company of one of the country's top rock bands. Photograph: Victor R Caivano/AP

He thunders around Buenos Aires on a Harley-Davidson and likes nothing better than strapping on a Fender Telecaster guitar to jam with famous musicians. Despite appearances, however, Amado Boudou is Argentina's 47-year-old economy minister – and looks set to be voted the country's first rock'n'roll vice-president in the general election this October.

The Argentinian president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, took the country by surprise two months ago when she chose Boudou, often criticised for his lifestyle, as her running mate. But the Fernandez-Boudou formula took 50% of the vote in national primaries this month, against a mere 12% for runner-up Ricardo Alfonsin of the Radical party.

"Rock helps me communicate directly with the people because rock doesn't lie, and people are fed up with lying politicians," said Boudou, whose campaign trail with the famous Argentinian band Mancha de Rolando in tow resembles a rock tour more than election politics.

Boudou espouses the progressive policies introduced in 2003 by the then-president Nestor Kirchner, the current president's former husband who died suddenly of a heart attack last year.

Nestor Kirchner rescued Argentina from its devastating 2002 financial crisis by boldly increasing spending while restructuring a gargantuan foreign debt without the help of the IMF. Boudou considers his 2005 break with the IMF as key to Argentina's consumption-based recovery, and he likes to accompany that message with crashing guitar chords on his current election tour.

"Mister banker, give me back my money!" he sings to the crowds who turn up at his political rallies.

"We're on tour with Amado and he's a great musician," said Manuel Quieto, the leader of Mancha de Rolando, a politically aware band that was riding high on a long string of hits before joining Boudou's campaign.

Quieto said he supports Boudou's brand of progressive economics. "Calm down mini-fascists," Quieto posted on his Facebook wall recently. "Your property is not at risk!"

Boudou scoffs at critics who see the last eight years of uninterrupted growth threatened in the medium term by a 25% inflation rate. "In the medium or long term we'll all be dead," Boudou said. "Let's deal with the problems at hand."

These include improved but still worrying poverty and unemployment indices, for which Kirchner has implemented an ambitious social spending programme. It has been financed in part by the nationalisation of $30bn (£18bn) from private pension funds engineered by Boudou.

Not everyone is pleased by Boudou's rock'n'roll antics. "We want a minister, not a guitar player. The subsistence of our country is at risk," one critic wrote in a Twitter message that angered the candidate this month. "You must live in another country, there's no risk for Argentina," Boudou tweeted back.

How does President Kirchner feel about her sidekick's guitar-slinging style?

"Her husband Nestor Kirchner had a rocker attitude when he took the unexpected course of breaking with the IMF," said Boudou. "She urges me to be myself."