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2021 Argentine legislative election

Legislative elections were held in Argentina on 14 November 2021.[1] Half of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies and a third of the seats in the Senate were renewed.[2] The election had previously been scheduled to take place on 24 October 2021,[3] but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina.[1]

2021 Argentine legislative election

← 2019 14 November 2021 2023 →
Chamber of Deputies

127 of the 257 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout71.39%
Party % Seats
JxC

42.13 61
FdT

34.17 50
Libertarians/Conservatives

7.23 4
FIT – Unidad

5.53 4
Vamos con VosFederal Consensus

5.51 4
FRCS

0.98 1
JSRN

0.60 1
MPN

0.47 1
SER Santa Cruz

0.20 1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate

24 of the 72 seats in the Senate
Turnout70.83%
Party % Seats
JxC

46.88 14
FdT

28.12 9
Vamos con VosFederal Consensus

11.29 1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Maps
Results by province

Open, Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries (PASO) were previously scheduled to take place on 8 August 2021, but took place on 12 September 2021, having also been postponed due to COVID-19.[1] There were proposals, backed by the ruling Frente de Todos, to scrap the primaries altogether due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] The proposals were opposed by the Juntos por el Cambio opposition.[5] In June 2021, it was agreed to reschedule the primaries alongside the general election instead.[6]

127 out of 257 seats in the lower chamber were renewed, while eight provinces (Catamarca, Chubut, Córdoba, Corrientes, La Pampa, Mendoza, Santa Fe and Tucumán) each renewed their 3 senators, in total accounting for 24 out of 72 seats in the upper chamber.[2]

The main opposition alliance, Together for Change, was seen as the big winner of the election.[7][8] The governing Frente de Todos suffered big losses, losing its majority in the Senate for the first time in almost 40 years, and seeing defeats in stronghold provinces such as Buenos Aires and La Pampa.[9][10] Observers attributed the loss to the widespread anger over high inflation and rising poverty.[11][12]

Background edit

Both executive and legislative offices were renewed in 2019 in Argentina; both elections were won by the Frente de Todos, a new coalition formed by a number of Peronist and Kirchnerist parties and alliances (chiefly the Justicialist Party and the Renewal Front)[13] to support the presidential ticket of Alberto Fernández and former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (now Vice President). The Frente de Todos coalition won 64 out of 130 seats up for grabs in the lower house in the last election, thus currently accounting for 120 seats in the 2019–2021 period – 9 seats short of a majority.[14][15]

The second minority and largest force in the opposition is the coalition formed to support former president Mauricio Macri: Juntos por el Cambio (formed by, among others, Republican Proposal, the Radical Civic Union and the Civic Coalition ARI), which won 56 seats in the Chamber of Deputies in 2019 and presently counts with 115 seats, following defections from its inter-bloc.[15][16]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic edit

As early December 2020, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina prompted discussions on whether the 2021 elections, as well as the Open, Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries (PASO) should be delayed and rescheduled. A majority of provincial governors (both from the governing Frente de Todos as well as from opposition parties), initially suggested scrapping the PASO primaries altogether.[4] The Juntos por el Cambio-led opposition in Congress, however, opposed the measure and introduced a bill to forbid the national government from cancelling the primaries.[5] The national executive, led by President Alberto Fernández, initially supported the measure,[17] but later reached an agreement with Juntos por el Cambio to reschedule both the primaries and the legislative election for a month later.[18] The new electoral calendar was published on 4 August 2021: the PASO primaries, originally scheduled for 8 August 2021, were rescheduled for 11 September 2021, while the legislative election, originally scheduled for 24 October 2021, were rescheduled for 14 November 2021.[1][19]

In order to hold both elections, in which the all citizens between the ages of 18 and 70 are legally obligated to vote,[20] the government and the National Electoral Chamber established a safety protocol which included a 30% increase of voting places and the vaccination of all electoral authorities.[21] In addition, those who may exhibit COVID-19 symptoms or were in close contact with a positive case may be exempt from voting.[22]

Electoral system edit

 
Number of Deputies at stake in each district.
 
Provinces that elected Senators in blue.

Chamber of Deputies edit

The 257 members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by proportional representation in 24 multi-member constituencies based on the provinces (plus the City of Buenos Aires). Seats are allocated using the d'Hondt method with a 3% electoral threshold.[23] In this election, 127 of the 257 seats are up for renewal for a four-year term.[24]

Province Seats Seats
at stake
Buenos Aires 70 35
City of Buenos Aires 25 13
Catamarca 5 3
Chaco 7 4
Chubut 5 2
Córdoba 18 9
Corrientes 7 3
Entre Ríos 9 5
Formosa 5 2
Jujuy 6 3
La Pampa 5 3
La Rioja 5 2
Mendoza 10 5
Misiones 7 3
Neuquén 5 3
Río Negro 5 2
Salta 7 3
San Juan 6 3
San Luis 5 3
Santa Cruz 5 3
Santa Fe 19 9
Santiago del Estero 7 3
Tierra del Fuego 5 2
Tucumán 9 4
Total 257 127

Senate edit

The 72 members of the Senate are elected in the same 24 constituencies, with three seats in each. The party receiving the most votes in each constituency wins two seats, with the third seat awarded to the second-placed party.[25] The 2021 elections will see one-third of Senators renewed, with eight provinces electing three Senators; Catamarca, Chubut, Córdoba, Corrientes, La Pampa, Mendoza, Santa Fe and Tucumán.[24]

Current composition edit

Results edit

Primary elections edit

 
Voting booth in Gonnet, Buenos Aires in the 2021 PASO elections.

Open primary elections for legislative posts were held nationwide on 12 September. With this system, all parties run primary elections on a single ballot. All parties must take part in it, both the parties with internal factions and parties with a single candidate list. Citizens may vote for any candidate of any party, but may only cast a single vote. The candidate receiving the most votes, of each party gaining 1.5% or higher of the valid votes advances to the general election.[26][27]

The results were largely negative for the governing Frente de Todos,[28] which received around 30% of the popular vote nationwide and lost in traditionally Peronist-leaning provinces such as Buenos Aires, Chaco, La Pampa, Santa Cruz and Tierra del Fuego.[29] With a nationwide aggregate of 42%, Juntos por el Cambio was the most voted alliance in 16 out of 23 provinces and in the City of Buenos Aires, while local parties won in Neuquén (MPN) and Río Negro (JSRN).[30] Nationwide, the Workers' Left Front was the third-most voted alliance, with exceptionally good results in Jujuy (23.31%), the City of Buenos Aires (6.23%) and Buenos Aires Province (5.22%).[31] In fourth place were the libertarian fronts "Avanza Libertad" and "La Libertad Avanza", which competed in Buenos Aires Province and the City of Buenos Aires (respectively) and received 6.85% of the vote overall, with a particularly strong result in the City, where the front became the third-largest force.[32]

With a turnout of 66.21%, the 2021 primaries had the lowest participation since the implementation of the PASO system in 2011, and were the least-concurred nationwide elections since the return of democracy in 1983.[33]

Chamber of Deputies edit

At a press conference, the Minister of the Interior, Eduardo de Pedro, said electoral participation was around 71.72% of the electoral roll, a rise of five points compared to the 67% participation in the PASO, a historical minimum in those kinds of choices.[34]

Argentina's main opposition party, Together for Change, was seen as the big winner of the election, gaining 42.13% of the vote and 61 out of the 127 seats.[7][8] The Justicialist Party suffered big losses as its coalition lost its majority in the Senate for the first time since the return of democracy in 1983, as well as being defeated in its historical stronghold province of Buenos Aires.[9][10] Frente de Todos only gathered 34.17% of the vote, winning 50 out of the 127 seats, 11 seats behind Juntos por el Cambio. Observers attributed the loss to the widespread anger over high inflation and rising poverty.[11][12] FIT-U won 5.53 of the vote and 4 seats, an increase of 2 seats. Federal Consensus lost 3 seats, winning only 3 seats and 5.51% of the vote.[35]

Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Juntos por el CambioJuntos por el Cambio9,239,43839.1556
Encuentro por Corrientes [es]325,7101.382
Together for Free Formosa [es]134,4450.571
United for San Luis126,6930.542
Civic Coalition ARI53,3650.230
Let's go La Rioja49,8370.210
Radical Civic Union13,8700.060
Total9,943,35842.1361116
Frente de TodosFrente de Todos7,474,03031.6746
Civic Front for Santiago363,1441.543
San Luis Force125,1630.531
Renewal Front39,6580.170
Federal Commitment35,6570.150
Faith Party24,3620.100
Everyone United3,6380.020
Total8,065,65234.1750118
Libertarians/ConservativesAvanza Libertad669,8652.8422
La Libertad Avanza358,3771.5222
+Valores263,5151.120
Republican Force101,3500.430
Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad75,0230.320
Encuentro Vecinal Córdoba [es]74,8790.320
Let's Go! Mendocinos38,2100.160
We Can31,7630.130
Conservative People's Party29,5690.130
Freedom, Values and Change Party22,9960.100
Union of the Democratic Centre17,0920.070
Federal Popular Union16,3740.070
Republicanos Unidos [es]6,4030.030
Total1,705,4167.2344
Workers' Left FrontWorkers' Left Front1,210,9065.1344
Workers' Party66,6660.280
Workers' Socialist Movement27,9460.120
Total1,305,5185.5344
Vamos con Vos
Federal Consensus
We Do for Córdoba491,9692.0823
Vamos con Vos415,9051.7613
Broad Front270,2671.1512
Freemen of the South Movement48,7490.210
Socialist Party39,1000.170
Ischigualasto Consensus35,1420.150
Total1,301,1325.5148
Front for the Renewal of Concord230,8170.9812
Together We Are Río Negro140,6340.6012
Neuquén People's Movement112,0270.4711
Green Party [es]91,1870.3900
Independent Salta + Salta Renewal Party Front86,2380.3700
Popular Sovereignty81,7950.3500
United for Salta71,9920.3100
Self-determination and Freedom56,3690.2400
Integrating Front49,5020.2100
Patriotic Labor Front [es]48,0850.2000
We are Energy to Renew Santa Cruz46,6330.2012
Independent Party of Chubut44,0530.1900
We are Future41,1260.1700
Federal Party38,0870.1600
We Are All Chubut29,6220.1300
FELICIDAD Party28,7960.1200
Santa Fe First27,7710.1200
Movimiento al Socialismo27,3110.1200
We are Fuegians15,3420.0700
Buenos Aires Thought Stream5,9910.0300
United3,4460.0100
Fueguian People's Movement2,5630.0100
Principles and Conviction Party2,0300.0100
Total23,602,493100.00127257
Valid votes23,602,49395.01
Invalid votes447,5271.80
Blank votes792,5523.19
Total votes24,842,572100.00
Registered voters/turnout34,796,24571.39
Source: Padron,[36] DINE[37]

Results by province edit

Province JxC FdT Lib./Cons. FIT-U We Go With You Others
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Buenos Aires 3,550,321 39.77 15 3,444,446 38.59 15 933,380 10.46 2 609,158 6.82 2 389,295 4.36 1
Buenos Aires City 867,044 47.09 7 461,514 25.06 3 313,808 17.04 2 142,581 7.74 1 56,369 3.06
Catamarca 75,625 37.14 1 103,144 50.65 2 8,728 4.29 10,150 4.98 5,991 2.94
Chaco 258,654 42.74 2 269,441 44.52 2 15,169 2.51 12,464 2.06 49,502 8.18
Chubut 110,649 37.97 1 82,134 28.19 1 24,941 8.56 73,675 25.28
Córdoba 1,064,246 54.06 6 206,795 10.50 1 135,822 6.90 69,755 3.54 491,969 24.99 2
Corrientes 325,710 58.73 2 214,694 38.71 1 14,146 2.55
Entre Ríos 436,013 54.61 3 276,883 34.68 2 29,569 3.70 27,946 3.50 16,710 2.09 11,282 1.41
Formosa 134,445 41.56 1 186,991 57.81 1 2,030 0.63
Jujuy 198,300 49.12 1 104,496 25.89 1 100,892 24.99 1
La Pampa 101,717 48.01 2 89,813 42.39 1 9,147 4.32 6,199 2.93 4,984 2.35
La Rioja 49,837 27.97 100,055 56.16 2 17,092 9.59 7,721 4.33 3,446 1.93
Mendoza 490,182 49.58 3 282,695 28.59 2 38,210 3.86 48,395 4.89 129,274 13.07
Misiones 257,323 40.86 2 96,310 15.29 22,996 3.65 22,336 3.55 230,817 36.65 1
Neuquén 140,303 36.88 1 66,070 17.37 1 31,153 8.19 30,884 8.12 112,027 29.45 1
Río Negro 102,579 27.21 1 101,844 27.01 18,192 4.83 7,749 2.06 146,657 38.90 1
Salta 188,162 29.99 1 205,853 32.81 2 46,397 7.39 187,026 29.81
San Juan 173,069 42.14 1 179,000 43.58 2 23,487 5.72 35,142 8.56
San Luis 140,563 51.16 2 128,801 46.88 1 5,365 1.95
Santa Cruz 57,921 35.09 1 45,436 27.52 1 11,660 7.06 50,058 30.32 1
Santa Fe 733,360 40.32 5 570,498 31.36 3 102,613 5.64 39,063 2.15 222,740 12.25 1 150,692 8.28
Santiago del Estero 72,932 13.03 402,802 71.96 3 4,173 0.75 5,444 0.97 26,307 4.70 48,085 8.59
Tierra del Fuego 27,584 29.02 1 37,692 39.65 1 6,403 6.74 3,883 4.08 19,502 20.51
Tucumán 386,819 39.96 2 408,245 42.18 2 101,350 10.47 34,105 3.52 37,377 3.86
Total 9,943,358 42.13 61 8,065,652 34.17 50 1,705,416 7.23 4 1,305,518 5.53 4 1,301,132 5.51 4 1,281,417 5.43 4

Senate edit

In the senate, Together for Change won 14 out of 24 seats available, making an increase of 5. Frente de Todos lost 4 seats, gathering only 9 seats. The last available seat went to Federal Consensus with FIT-U gaining none.[35]

Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Juntos por el CambioJuntos por el Cambio2,962,22542.2012
Encuentro por Corrientes [es]328,2174.682
Total3,290,44246.881433
Frente de TodosFrente de Todos1,937,94727.61935
Federal Commitment35,9700.5100
Total1,973,91728.12935
Vamos con Vos/Federal ConsensusWe Do for Córdoba491,0297.0011
Broad Front281,0924.0000
We Go With You13,9340.2000
Socialist Party6,2060.0900
Total792,26111.2911
Libertarians/ConservativesRepublican Force107,8291.5400
Encuentro Vecinal Córdoba [es]74,0241.0500
Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad66,9100.9500
La Libertad Avanza44,8190.6400
Let's Go! Mendocinos37,9920.5400
We Can31,5880.4500
Federal Popular Union16,8600.2400
Total380,0225.4100
Workers' Left Front233,5983.3300
Green Party [es]90,9491.3000
Popular Sovereignty64,0100.9100
Independent Party of Chubut44,7360.6400
We are Future39,5260.5600
Federal Party38,4170.5500
Santa Fe First30,1170.4300
We Are All Chubut29,9370.4300
Buenos Aires Thought Stream6,0660.0900
Movimiento al Socialismo4,9390.0700
Federal Peronism1
Together We Are Río Negro1
Front for the Renewal of Concord1
Total7,018,937100.002472
Valid votes7,018,93794.33
Invalid votes164,0992.21
Blank votes257,5233.46
Total votes7,440,559100.00
Registered voters/turnout10,505,45170.83
Source: Padron,[36] DINE[37]

Results by province edit

Province JxC FdT VcV Lib./Cons. Others
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Catamarca 76,354 37.12 1 104,412 50.76 2 10,167 4.94 14,753 7.17
Chubut 110,997 37.87 2 82,674 28.21 1 99,443 33.93
Córdoba 1,063,595 54.09 2 206,300 10.49 491,029 24.97 1 135,703 6.90 69,644 3.54
Corrientes 328,217 58.82 2 215,822 38.68 1 13,934 2.50
La Pampa 102,218 48.25 2 89,409 42.21 1 6,206 2.93 14,005 6.61
Mendoza 490,754 49.57 2 284,119 28.70 1 37,992 3.84 177,230 17.90
Santa Fe 738,568 40.41 2 589,837 32.27 1 228,459 12.50 98,498 5.39 172,507 9.44
Tucumán 379,739 39.31 1 401,344 41.54 2 42,466 4.40 107,829 11.16 34,713 3.59
Total 3,290,442 46.88 14 1,973,917 28.12 9 792,261 11.29 1 380,022 5.41 0 582,295 8.30 0

Aftermath edit

Argentina's President Alberto Fernández called for dialogue with the opposition after Sunday's midterm parliamentary elections, with the results showing his governing coalition has lost control of Congress. "An opposition that is responsible and open to dialogue is a patriotic opposition," Fernández said, adding that he hoped for cooperation that would be "fruitful, for the general interests of the country."[38]

Argentina's main opposition party, Together for Change, celebrated the victory in the legislative elections.[39] Former president Mauricio Macri reacted, “The result confirms that it is the end of one era and the beginning of another".[40] Macri continued saying, "These next two years are going to be difficult," while assuring voters that his coalition would "act with great responsibility."[41]

The Argentinian peso went up in value following the opposition's win. Alberto Ramos, an analyst at Goldman Sachs, explained the rise: "The market is likely to take a net positive view of the election results. A more market-friendly composition of Congress could lead to more effective checks and balances and ultimately a policy regime shift in 2023".[42]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Heath, Maximilian (7 May 2021). "Argentina pushes back mid-term elections as COVID-19 rages". Reuters. from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b "¿Qué se vota en las elecciones de 2021 en Argentina?". MDZ Online (in Spanish). 28 October 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  3. ^ "En medio de la pandemia, el Gobierno confirmó el calendario electoral para el año que viene". infobae (in European Spanish). 29 June 2020. from the original on 30 June 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b "La pulseada por las PASO 2021". Página/12 (in Spanish). 20 December 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  5. ^ a b "PASO 2021: una diputada presentó un proyecto para prohibir la suspensión de las primarias". Perfil (in Spanish). 15 December 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  6. ^ "El Senado argentino aprueba la ley para postergar las elecciones por la pandemia". La Nación (in Spanish). 2 June 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  7. ^ a b "Argentina's opposition scores win in midterm elections". AP NEWS. 14 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  8. ^ a b CALATRAVA, DÉBORA REY and ALMUDENA (15 November 2021). "Argentina's opposition scores win in midterm elections". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  9. ^ a b "Peronists may lose Argentina Congress for first time in 40 years". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  10. ^ a b Bronstein, Hugh; Misculin, Nicolás (15 November 2021). "Argentina's Peronists on the ropes after bruising midterm defeat". Reuters. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  11. ^ a b "Argentina president suffers severe setback in midterm elections", Deutsche Welle, 15 November 2021, retrieved 15 November 2021
  12. ^ a b Ap (15 November 2021). "Argentina President suffers big loss in midterm elections". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  13. ^ El Ali, Julio (27 October 2020). "Se cumple un año de la victoria del Frente de Todos en las elecciones presidenciales". Télam (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  14. ^ "¿Cómo quedó conformado el Congreso después de las elecciones?". Página/12 (in Spanish). 28 October 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  15. ^ a b "Diputados Nacionales". Honorable Cámara de Diputados de la Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  16. ^ Argento, Analía (30 October 2020). "Después de votar a favor del Presupuesto, un diputado dejó el bloque de Juntos por el Cambio". Infobae (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  17. ^ "El Gobierno avanza con su plan de postergar las PASO y las generales". Perfil (in Spanish). 10 April 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Con el acuerdo del oficialismo y Juntos por el Cambio, el Congreso se encamina a modificar el calendario electoral". Tiempo Argentino (in Spanish). 19 May 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  19. ^ "Calendario electoral 2021 en la Argentina: las fechas de las elecciones de todo el país". La Nación (in Spanish). 4 August 2021.
  20. ^ "Ley simple: Voto". argentina.gob.ar (in Spanish). 12 July 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  21. ^ Domínguez, Juan José (3 August 2021). "Elecciones en pandemia: qué medidas tomará el Gobierno nacional para una votación inédita en la Argentina". Chequeado (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  22. ^ "Protocolo para ir a votar en las Elecciones PASO 2021". Infobae (in Spanish). 7 September 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  23. ^ "IPU PARLINE database: ARGENTINA (Cámara de Diputados), Electoral system". archive.ipu.org. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  24. ^ a b "Elecciones legislativas 2021: ¿Qué se vota y a quiénes se les vence el mandato?". Ámbito (in Spanish). 30 June 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  25. ^ "IPU PARLINE database: ARGENTINA (Senado), Electoral system". archive.ipu.org. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  26. ^ "What's at stake in Argentina's midterm primary this Sunday". Buenos Aires Times. 10 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  27. ^ Wainfeld, Mario (12 September 2021). "Cómo son las PASO y cuánto está en juego". Página/12 (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  28. ^ Grainger, James (13 September 2021). "Argentina's government suffers heavy defeat in PASO primaries". Buenos Aires Times. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  29. ^ Rivas Molina, Federico (12 September 2021). "El kirchnerismo sufre una catástrofe electoral en las primarias en Argentina". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  30. ^ "Mapa electoral:los resultados en todo el país". La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  31. ^ Soriano, Fernando (12 September 2021). "Celebración y optimismo en el Frente de Izquierda, que se siente a las puertas de una elección histórica en noviembre". Infobae (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  32. ^ "Milei wins 13% of vote in City PASO, taking Avanza Libertad into third". Buenos Aires Times. 13 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  33. ^ "Se registró la más baja participación de ciudadanos en las urnas". Télam (in Spanish). 13 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  34. ^ "Buenos Aires Times | Polling stations close as authorities reveal turnout up to 71%". batimes.com.ar. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  35. ^ a b Redacción LA NACION (15 November 2021). "Todos los nombres. Quiénes entran y quiénes quedan fuera del Congreso". La Nación (in Spanish). ISSN 0325-0946. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  36. ^ a b "Consulta de Escrutinios Definitivos". www.padron.gob.ar.
  37. ^ a b "Actas de escrutinio definitivo". Cámara Nacional Electoral.
  38. ^ "Mid-term elections: Argentina govt loses Congress majority, seeks opposition dialogue". today.rtl.lu. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  39. ^ "Juntos por el Cambio analiza los resultados y la convocatoria presidencial". Tvpublica. from the original on 15 November 2021.
  40. ^ "Buenos Aires Times | Macri on election: 'It's the end of one era and the beginning of another'". www.batimes.com.ar. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  41. ^ "Argentina's president calls for dialogue with opposition as Senate majority in peril". France 24. 15 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  42. ^ "EMERGING MARKETS-Argentine peso slips slightly after ruling party faces defeat in mid-terms". from the original on 15 November 2021.

2021, argentine, legislative, election, legislative, elections, were, held, argentina, november, 2021, half, seats, chamber, deputies, third, seats, senate, were, renewed, election, previously, been, scheduled, take, place, october, 2021, postponed, covid, pan. Legislative elections were held in Argentina on 14 November 2021 1 Half of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies and a third of the seats in the Senate were renewed 2 The election had previously been scheduled to take place on 24 October 2021 3 but was postponed due to the COVID 19 pandemic in Argentina 1 2021 Argentine legislative election 2019 14 November 2021 2023 Chamber of Deputies127 of the 257 seats in the Chamber of DeputiesTurnout71 39 Party SeatsJxC 42 13 61FdT 34 17 50Libertarians Conservatives 7 23 4FIT Unidad 5 53 4Vamos con Vos Federal Consensus 5 51 4FRCS 0 98 1JSRN 0 60 1MPN 0 47 1SER Santa Cruz 0 20 1This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below Senate24 of the 72 seats in the SenateTurnout70 83 Party SeatsJxC 46 88 14FdT 28 12 9Vamos con Vos Federal Consensus 11 29 1This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below MapsResults by provinceOpen Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries PASO were previously scheduled to take place on 8 August 2021 but took place on 12 September 2021 having also been postponed due to COVID 19 1 There were proposals backed by the ruling Frente de Todos to scrap the primaries altogether due to the COVID 19 pandemic 4 The proposals were opposed by the Juntos por el Cambio opposition 5 In June 2021 it was agreed to reschedule the primaries alongside the general election instead 6 127 out of 257 seats in the lower chamber were renewed while eight provinces Catamarca Chubut Cordoba Corrientes La Pampa Mendoza Santa Fe and Tucuman each renewed their 3 senators in total accounting for 24 out of 72 seats in the upper chamber 2 The main opposition alliance Together for Change was seen as the big winner of the election 7 8 The governing Frente de Todos suffered big losses losing its majority in the Senate for the first time in almost 40 years and seeing defeats in stronghold provinces such as Buenos Aires and La Pampa 9 10 Observers attributed the loss to the widespread anger over high inflation and rising poverty 11 12 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic 2 Electoral system 2 1 Chamber of Deputies 2 2 Senate 3 Current composition 4 Results 4 1 Primary elections 4 2 Chamber of Deputies 4 2 1 Results by province 4 3 Senate 4 3 1 Results by province 5 Aftermath 6 ReferencesBackground editBoth executive and legislative offices were renewed in 2019 in Argentina both elections were won by the Frente de Todos a new coalition formed by a number of Peronist and Kirchnerist parties and alliances chiefly the Justicialist Party and the Renewal Front 13 to support the presidential ticket of Alberto Fernandez and former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner now Vice President The Frente de Todos coalition won 64 out of 130 seats up for grabs in the lower house in the last election thus currently accounting for 120 seats in the 2019 2021 period 9 seats short of a majority 14 15 The second minority and largest force in the opposition is the coalition formed to support former president Mauricio Macri Juntos por el Cambio formed by among others Republican Proposal the Radical Civic Union and the Civic Coalition ARI which won 56 seats in the Chamber of Deputies in 2019 and presently counts with 115 seats following defections from its inter bloc 15 16 Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic edit As early December 2020 the impact of the COVID 19 pandemic in Argentina prompted discussions on whether the 2021 elections as well as the Open Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries PASO should be delayed and rescheduled A majority of provincial governors both from the governing Frente de Todos as well as from opposition parties initially suggested scrapping the PASO primaries altogether 4 The Juntos por el Cambio led opposition in Congress however opposed the measure and introduced a bill to forbid the national government from cancelling the primaries 5 The national executive led by President Alberto Fernandez initially supported the measure 17 but later reached an agreement with Juntos por el Cambio to reschedule both the primaries and the legislative election for a month later 18 The new electoral calendar was published on 4 August 2021 the PASO primaries originally scheduled for 8 August 2021 were rescheduled for 11 September 2021 while the legislative election originally scheduled for 24 October 2021 were rescheduled for 14 November 2021 1 19 In order to hold both elections in which the all citizens between the ages of 18 and 70 are legally obligated to vote 20 the government and the National Electoral Chamber established a safety protocol which included a 30 increase of voting places and the vaccination of all electoral authorities 21 In addition those who may exhibit COVID 19 symptoms or were in close contact with a positive case may be exempt from voting 22 Electoral system edit nbsp Number of Deputies at stake in each district nbsp Provinces that elected Senators in blue Chamber of Deputies edit The 257 members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by proportional representation in 24 multi member constituencies based on the provinces plus the City of Buenos Aires Seats are allocated using the d Hondt method with a 3 electoral threshold 23 In this election 127 of the 257 seats are up for renewal for a four year term 24 Province Seats Seatsat stakeBuenos Aires 70 35City of Buenos Aires 25 13Catamarca 5 3Chaco 7 4Chubut 5 2Cordoba 18 9Corrientes 7 3Entre Rios 9 5Formosa 5 2Jujuy 6 3La Pampa 5 3La Rioja 5 2Mendoza 10 5Misiones 7 3Neuquen 5 3Rio Negro 5 2Salta 7 3San Juan 6 3San Luis 5 3Santa Cruz 5 3Santa Fe 19 9Santiago del Estero 7 3Tierra del Fuego 5 2Tucuman 9 4Total 257 127Outgoing deputiesProvince Deputy PartyBuenos Aires Juan Aicega PROBuenos Aires Pablo Miguel Ansaloni Federal Unity and EquityBuenos Aires Hernan Berisso PROBuenos Aires Claudia Bernazza Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Eduardo Bali Bucca Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Adriana Caceres PROBuenos Aires Marcela Campagnoli Civic CoalitionBuenos Aires Javier Campos Civic CoalitionBuenos Aires Walter Correa Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Jose Ignacio de Mendiguren Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Hector Fernandez Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Carlos Alberto Fernandez UCRBuenos Aires Ezequiel Fernandez Langan PROBuenos Aires Hector Toty Flores Civic CoalitionBuenos Aires Juan Carlos Giordano Socialist Left Left FrontBuenos Aires Marcelo Koenig Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Monica Macha Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Martin Nicolas Medina PROBuenos Aires Josefina Mendoza UCRBuenos Aires Leopoldo Raul Guido Moreau Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Maria Graciela Ocana PROBuenos Aires Maria Carla Piccolomini PROBuenos Aires Fabio Jose Quetglas UCRBuenos Aires Nicolas Rodriguez Saa Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Laura Russo Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Jorge Sarghini Federal ConsensusBuenos Aires Monica Leticia Schlotthauer Socialist Left Left FrontBuenos Aires Maria Liliana Schwindt Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Magdalena Sierra Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Vanesa Siley Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Mirta Tundis Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Romina Uhrig Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Fernanda Vallejos Frente de TodosBuenos Aires Natalia Soledad Villa PROBuenos Aires Hugo Yasky Frente de TodosCity of Buenos Aires Ana Carla Carrizo UCRCity of Buenos Aires Gabriela Cerruti Frente de TodosCity of Buenos Aires Alvaro Hector de Lamadrid UCRCity of Buenos Aires Jorge Ricardo Enriquez PROCity of Buenos Aires Alejandro Garcia PROCity of Buenos Aires Carlos Salomon Heller Frente de TodosCity of Buenos Aires Fernando Adolfo Iglesias PROCity of Buenos Aires Juan Manuel Lopez Civic CoalitionCity of Buenos Aires Gisela Marziotta Frente de TodosCity of Buenos Aires Paula Mariana Oliveto Lago Civic CoalitionCity of Buenos Aires Jose Luis Patino PROCity of Buenos Aires Carmen Polledo PROCity of Buenos Aires Facundo Suarez Lastra UCRCatamarca Eduardo Segundo Brizuela del Moral Civic and Social Front of CatamarcaCatamarca Silvana Micaela Ginocchio Frente de TodosCatamarca Dante Edgardo Lopez Rodriguez Frente de TodosChaco Aida Beatriz Maxima Ayala UCRChaco Juan Mosqueda Frente de TodosChaco Elda Pertile Frente de TodosChaco Alicia Terada Civic CoalitionChubut Gustavo Menna UCRChubut Rosa Rosario Munoz Frente de TodosCordoba Brenda Lis Austin UCRCordoba Hector Baldassi PROCordoba Maria Soledad Carrizo UCRCordoba Pablo Carro Frente de TodosCordoba Paulo Leonardo Cassinerio Federal CordobaCordoba Gabriel Alberto Frizza PROCordoba Claudia Gabriela Marquez Federal CordobaCordoba Diego Matias Mestre UCRCordoba Alejandra Maria Vigo Federal CordobaCorrientes Sofia Brambilla PROCorrientes Estela Mercedes Regidor Belledone UCRCorrientes Jorge Antonio Romero Frente de TodosEntre Rios Atilio Francisco Salvador Benedetti UCREntre Rios Mayda Cresto Frente de TodosEntre Rios Alicia Fregonese PROEntre Rios Ana Carolina Gaillard Frente de TodosEntre Rios Jorge Enrique Lacoste UCRFormosa Mario Horacio Arce UCRFormosa Gustavo Ramiro Fernandez Patri Frente de TodosJujuy Maria Gabriela Burgos UCRJujuy Jose Luis Martiarena Frente de TodosJujuy Osmar Antonio Monaldi PROLa Pampa Melina Aida Delu Frente de TodosLa Pampa Martin Maquieyra PROLa Pampa Ariel Rauschenberger Frente de TodosLa Rioja Danilo Adrian Flores Frente de TodosLa Rioja Julio Enrique Sahad PROMendoza Omar Chafi Felix Frente de TodosMendoza Claudia Najul UCRMendoza Luis Alfonso Petri UCRMendoza Jose Luis Ramon Federal Unity and EquityMendoza Federico Raul Zamarbide UCRMisiones Flavia Morales Misiones Front for ConcordMisiones Luis Mario Pastori UCRMisiones Alfredo Oscar Schiavoni PROMisiones Ricardo Wellbach Misiones Front for ConcordNeuquen Alma Liliana Chani Sapag Neuquen People s MovementNeuquen David Pablo Schlereth PRONeuquen Carlos Alberto Vivero Frente de TodosRio Negro Lorena Matzen UCRRio Negro Ayelen Sposito Frente de TodosSalta Alcira Elsa Figueroa Frente de TodosSalta Martin Federico Grande Durand PROSalta Miguel Andres Costas Zottos JusticialistSan Juan Walberto Enrique Allende Frente de TodosSan Juan Eduardo Augusto Caceres PROSan Juan Alejandro Francisco Guevara Olivera Frente de TodosSan Luis Karim Augusto Alume Sbodio Frente de TodosSan Luis Jose Luis Riccardo UCRSan Luis Victoria Rosso Frente de TodosSanta Cruz Antonio Jose Carambia Federal ActionSanta Cruz Roxana Nahir Reyes UCRSanta Cruz Juan Benedicto Vazquez Frente de TodosSanta Fe Esteban Mateo Bogdanich Frente de TodosSanta Fe Luis Gustavo Contigiani Progressive Civic and Social FrontSanta Fe Gonzalo Pedro Antonio del Cerro UCRSanta Fe Josefina Victoria Tosetto Gonzalez Frente de TodosSanta Fe Luciano Andres Laspina PROSanta Fe Maria Lucila Lehmann Civic CoalitionSanta Fe Patricia Monica Mounier Frente de TodosSanta Fe Gisela Scaglia PROSantiago del Estero Norma Amanda Abdala de Matarazzo Frente de TodosSantiago del Estero Bernardo Jose Pepe Herrera Frente de TodosSantiago del Estero Maria Luisa Montoto de Rogel Frente de TodosTierra del Fuego Hector Antonio Stefani PROTierra del Fuego Ines Carolina Yutrovic Frente de TodosTucuman Beatriz Luisa Avila Party for Social JusticeTucuman Jose Manuel Cano UCRTucuman Gladys Medina Frente de TodosTucuman Pablo Raul Yedlin Frente de TodosSenate edit The 72 members of the Senate are elected in the same 24 constituencies with three seats in each The party receiving the most votes in each constituency wins two seats with the third seat awarded to the second placed party 25 The 2021 elections will see one third of Senators renewed with eight provinces electing three Senators Catamarca Chubut Cordoba Corrientes La Pampa Mendoza Santa Fe and Tucuman 24 Outgoing senatorsProvince Deputy PartyCatamarca Ines Imelda Blas Frente de TodosOscar Anibal Castillo Civic and Social Front of CatamarcaDalmacio Mera Figueroa Frente de TodosChubut Nancy Susana Gonzalez Frente de TodosAlfredo Hector Luenzo Frente de TodosJuan Mario Pais Frente de TodosCordoba Carlos Alberto Caserio Frente de TodosErnesto Felix Martinez PRO FrontLaura Elena Rodriguez Machado PRO FrontCorrientes Ana Claudia Almiron Frente de TodosNestor Pedro Braillard Poccard PRO FrontCarlos Mauricio Espinola Frente de TodosLa Pampa Norma Haydee Durango Frente de TodosDaniel Anibal Lovera Frente de TodosJuan Carlos Marino Radical Civic UnionMendoza Julio Cesar Cleto Cobos Radical Civic UnionAnabel Fernandez Sagasti Frente de TodosPamela Fernanda Verasay Radical Civic UnionSanta Fe Roberto Mario Mirabella Frente de TodosMaria de los Angeles Sacnun Frente de TodosAlejandra Vucasovich Santa Fe FederalTucuman Jose Jorge Alperovich Frente de TodosSilvia Beatriz Elias de Perez Radical Civic UnionBeatriz Graciela Mirkin Frente de TodosCurrent composition editMain articles List of Argentine deputies 2019 2021 and List of Argentine senators 2019 2021Results editPrimary elections edit See also Primary elections in Argentina nbsp Voting booth in Gonnet Buenos Aires in the 2021 PASO elections Open primary elections for legislative posts were held nationwide on 12 September With this system all parties run primary elections on a single ballot All parties must take part in it both the parties with internal factions and parties with a single candidate list Citizens may vote for any candidate of any party but may only cast a single vote The candidate receiving the most votes of each party gaining 1 5 or higher of the valid votes advances to the general election 26 27 The results were largely negative for the governing Frente de Todos 28 which received around 30 of the popular vote nationwide and lost in traditionally Peronist leaning provinces such as Buenos Aires Chaco La Pampa Santa Cruz and Tierra del Fuego 29 With a nationwide aggregate of 42 Juntos por el Cambio was the most voted alliance in 16 out of 23 provinces and in the City of Buenos Aires while local parties won in Neuquen MPN and Rio Negro JSRN 30 Nationwide the Workers Left Front was the third most voted alliance with exceptionally good results in Jujuy 23 31 the City of Buenos Aires 6 23 and Buenos Aires Province 5 22 31 In fourth place were the libertarian fronts Avanza Libertad and La Libertad Avanza which competed in Buenos Aires Province and the City of Buenos Aires respectively and received 6 85 of the vote overall with a particularly strong result in the City where the front became the third largest force 32 With a turnout of 66 21 the 2021 primaries had the lowest participation since the implementation of the PASO system in 2011 and were the least concurred nationwide elections since the return of democracy in 1983 33 Chamber of Deputies edit At a press conference the Minister of the Interior Eduardo de Pedro said electoral participation was around 71 72 of the electoral roll a rise of five points compared to the 67 participation in the PASO a historical minimum in those kinds of choices 34 Argentina s main opposition party Together for Change was seen as the big winner of the election gaining 42 13 of the vote and 61 out of the 127 seats 7 8 The Justicialist Party suffered big losses as its coalition lost its majority in the Senate for the first time since the return of democracy in 1983 as well as being defeated in its historical stronghold province of Buenos Aires 9 10 Frente de Todos only gathered 34 17 of the vote winning 50 out of the 127 seats 11 seats behind Juntos por el Cambio Observers attributed the loss to the widespread anger over high inflation and rising poverty 11 12 FIT U won 5 53 of the vote and 4 seats an increase of 2 seats Federal Consensus lost 3 seats winning only 3 seats and 5 51 of the vote 35 Party or allianceVotes SeatsWonTotalJuntos por el CambioJuntos por el Cambio9 239 43839 1556 Encuentro por Corrientes es 325 7101 382 Together for Free Formosa es 134 4450 571 United for San Luis126 6930 542 Civic Coalition ARI53 3650 230 Let s go La Rioja49 8370 210 Radical Civic Union13 8700 060 Total9 943 35842 1361116Frente de TodosFrente de Todos7 474 03031 6746 Civic Front for Santiago363 1441 543 San Luis Force125 1630 531 Renewal Front39 6580 170 Federal Commitment35 6570 150 Faith Party24 3620 100 Everyone United3 6380 020 Total8 065 65234 1750118Libertarians ConservativesAvanza Libertad669 8652 8422La Libertad Avanza358 3771 5222 Valores263 5151 120 Republican Force101 3500 430 Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad75 0230 320 Encuentro Vecinal Cordoba es 74 8790 320 Let s Go Mendocinos38 2100 160 We Can31 7630 130 Conservative People s Party29 5690 130 Freedom Values and Change Party22 9960 100 Union of the Democratic Centre17 0920 070 Federal Popular Union16 3740 070 Republicanos Unidos es 6 4030 030 Total1 705 4167 2344Workers Left FrontWorkers Left Front1 210 9065 1344Workers Party66 6660 280 Workers Socialist Movement27 9460 120 Total1 305 5185 5344Vamos con VosFederal ConsensusWe Do for Cordoba491 9692 0823Vamos con Vos415 9051 7613Broad Front270 2671 1512Freemen of the South Movement48 7490 210 Socialist Party39 1000 170 Ischigualasto Consensus35 1420 150 Total1 301 1325 5148Front for the Renewal of Concord230 8170 9812Together We Are Rio Negro140 6340 6012Neuquen People s Movement112 0270 4711Green Party es 91 1870 3900Independent Salta Salta Renewal Party Front86 2380 3700Popular Sovereignty81 7950 3500United for Salta71 9920 3100Self determination and Freedom56 3690 2400Integrating Front49 5020 2100Patriotic Labor Front es 48 0850 2000We are Energy to Renew Santa Cruz46 6330 2012Independent Party of Chubut44 0530 1900We are Future41 1260 1700Federal Party38 0870 1600We Are All Chubut29 6220 1300FELICIDAD Party28 7960 1200Santa Fe First27 7710 1200Movimiento al Socialismo27 3110 1200We are Fuegians15 3420 0700Buenos Aires Thought Stream5 9910 0300United3 4460 0100Fueguian People s Movement2 5630 0100Principles and Conviction Party2 0300 0100Total23 602 493100 00127257Valid votes23 602 49395 01Invalid votes447 5271 80Blank votes792 5523 19Total votes24 842 572100 00Registered voters turnout34 796 24571 39Source Padron 36 DINE 37 Results by province edit Province JxC FdT Lib Cons FIT U We Go With You OthersVotes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes SeatsBuenos Aires 3 550 321 39 77 15 3 444 446 38 59 15 933 380 10 46 2 609 158 6 82 2 389 295 4 36 1 Buenos Aires City 867 044 47 09 7 461 514 25 06 3 313 808 17 04 2 142 581 7 74 1 56 369 3 06 Catamarca 75 625 37 14 1 103 144 50 65 2 8 728 4 29 10 150 4 98 5 991 2 94 Chaco 258 654 42 74 2 269 441 44 52 2 15 169 2 51 12 464 2 06 49 502 8 18 Chubut 110 649 37 97 1 82 134 28 19 1 24 941 8 56 73 675 25 28 Cordoba 1 064 246 54 06 6 206 795 10 50 1 135 822 6 90 69 755 3 54 491 969 24 99 2 Corrientes 325 710 58 73 2 214 694 38 71 1 14 146 2 55 Entre Rios 436 013 54 61 3 276 883 34 68 2 29 569 3 70 27 946 3 50 16 710 2 09 11 282 1 41 Formosa 134 445 41 56 1 186 991 57 81 1 2 030 0 63 Jujuy 198 300 49 12 1 104 496 25 89 1 100 892 24 99 1 La Pampa 101 717 48 01 2 89 813 42 39 1 9 147 4 32 6 199 2 93 4 984 2 35 La Rioja 49 837 27 97 100 055 56 16 2 17 092 9 59 7 721 4 33 3 446 1 93 Mendoza 490 182 49 58 3 282 695 28 59 2 38 210 3 86 48 395 4 89 129 274 13 07 Misiones 257 323 40 86 2 96 310 15 29 22 996 3 65 22 336 3 55 230 817 36 65 1Neuquen 140 303 36 88 1 66 070 17 37 1 31 153 8 19 30 884 8 12 112 027 29 45 1Rio Negro 102 579 27 21 1 101 844 27 01 18 192 4 83 7 749 2 06 146 657 38 90 1Salta 188 162 29 99 1 205 853 32 81 2 46 397 7 39 187 026 29 81 San Juan 173 069 42 14 1 179 000 43 58 2 23 487 5 72 35 142 8 56 San Luis 140 563 51 16 2 128 801 46 88 1 5 365 1 95 Santa Cruz 57 921 35 09 1 45 436 27 52 1 11 660 7 06 50 058 30 32 1Santa Fe 733 360 40 32 5 570 498 31 36 3 102 613 5 64 39 063 2 15 222 740 12 25 1 150 692 8 28 Santiago del Estero 72 932 13 03 402 802 71 96 3 4 173 0 75 5 444 0 97 26 307 4 70 48 085 8 59 Tierra del Fuego 27 584 29 02 1 37 692 39 65 1 6 403 6 74 3 883 4 08 19 502 20 51 Tucuman 386 819 39 96 2 408 245 42 18 2 101 350 10 47 34 105 3 52 37 377 3 86 Total 9 943 358 42 13 61 8 065 652 34 17 50 1 705 416 7 23 4 1 305 518 5 53 4 1 301 132 5 51 4 1 281 417 5 43 4Senate edit In the senate Together for Change won 14 out of 24 seats available making an increase of 5 Frente de Todos lost 4 seats gathering only 9 seats The last available seat went to Federal Consensus with FIT U gaining none 35 Party or allianceVotes SeatsWonTotalJuntos por el CambioJuntos por el Cambio2 962 22542 2012 Encuentro por Corrientes es 328 2174 682 Total3 290 44246 881433Frente de TodosFrente de Todos1 937 94727 61935Federal Commitment35 9700 5100Total1 973 91728 12935Vamos con Vos Federal ConsensusWe Do for Cordoba491 0297 0011Broad Front281 0924 0000We Go With You13 9340 2000Socialist Party6 2060 0900Total792 26111 2911Libertarians ConservativesRepublican Force107 8291 5400Encuentro Vecinal Cordoba es 74 0241 0500Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad66 9100 9500La Libertad Avanza44 8190 6400Let s Go Mendocinos37 9920 5400We Can31 5880 4500Federal Popular Union16 8600 2400Total380 0225 4100Workers Left Front233 5983 3300Green Party es 90 9491 3000Popular Sovereignty64 0100 9100Independent Party of Chubut44 7360 6400We are Future39 5260 5600Federal Party38 4170 5500Santa Fe First30 1170 4300We Are All Chubut29 9370 4300Buenos Aires Thought Stream6 0660 0900Movimiento al Socialismo4 9390 0700Federal Peronism 1Together We Are Rio Negro 1Front for the Renewal of Concord 1Total7 018 937100 002472Valid votes7 018 93794 33Invalid votes164 0992 21Blank votes257 5233 46Total votes7 440 559100 00Registered voters turnout10 505 45170 83Source Padron 36 DINE 37 Results by province edit Province JxC FdT VcV Lib Cons OthersVotes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes SeatsCatamarca 76 354 37 12 1 104 412 50 76 2 10 167 4 94 14 753 7 17 Chubut 110 997 37 87 2 82 674 28 21 1 99 443 33 93 Cordoba 1 063 595 54 09 2 206 300 10 49 491 029 24 97 1 135 703 6 90 69 644 3 54 Corrientes 328 217 58 82 2 215 822 38 68 1 13 934 2 50 La Pampa 102 218 48 25 2 89 409 42 21 1 6 206 2 93 14 005 6 61 Mendoza 490 754 49 57 2 284 119 28 70 1 37 992 3 84 177 230 17 90 Santa Fe 738 568 40 41 2 589 837 32 27 1 228 459 12 50 98 498 5 39 172 507 9 44 Tucuman 379 739 39 31 1 401 344 41 54 2 42 466 4 40 107 829 11 16 34 713 3 59 Total 3 290 442 46 88 14 1 973 917 28 12 9 792 261 11 29 1 380 022 5 41 0 582 295 8 30 0Aftermath editArgentina s President Alberto Fernandez called for dialogue with the opposition after Sunday s midterm parliamentary elections with the results showing his governing coalition has lost control of Congress An opposition that is responsible and open to dialogue is a patriotic opposition Fernandez said adding that he hoped for cooperation that would be fruitful for the general interests of the country 38 Argentina s main opposition party Together for Change celebrated the victory in the legislative elections 39 Former president Mauricio Macri reacted The result confirms that it is the end of one era and the beginning of another 40 Macri continued saying These next two years are going to be difficult while assuring voters that his coalition would act with great responsibility 41 The Argentinian peso went up in value following the opposition s win Alberto Ramos an analyst at Goldman Sachs explained the rise The market is likely to take a net positive view of the election results A more market friendly composition of Congress could lead to more effective checks and balances and ultimately a policy regime shift in 2023 42 References edit a b c d Heath Maximilian 7 May 2021 Argentina pushes back mid term elections as COVID 19 rages Reuters Archived from the original on 8 May 2021 Retrieved 2 June 2021 a b Que se vota en las elecciones de 2021 en Argentina MDZ Online in Spanish 28 October 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2021 En medio de la pandemia el Gobierno confirmo el calendario electoral para el ano que viene infobae in European Spanish 29 June 2020 Archived from the original on 30 June 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2021 a b La pulseada por las PASO 2021 Pagina 12 in Spanish 20 December 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2021 a b PASO 2021 una diputada presento un proyecto para prohibir la suspension de las primarias Perfil in Spanish 15 December 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2021 El Senado argentino aprueba la ley para postergar las elecciones por la pandemia La Nacion in Spanish 2 June 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 a b Argentina s opposition scores win in midterm elections AP NEWS 14 November 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b CALATRAVA DEBORA REY and ALMUDENA 15 November 2021 Argentina s opposition scores win in midterm elections San Antonio Express News Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Peronists may lose Argentina Congress for first time in 40 years www aljazeera com Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Bronstein Hugh Misculin Nicolas 15 November 2021 Argentina s Peronists on the ropes after bruising midterm defeat Reuters Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Argentina president suffers severe setback in midterm elections Deutsche Welle 15 November 2021 retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Ap 15 November 2021 Argentina President suffers big loss in midterm elections The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 15 November 2021 El Ali Julio 27 October 2020 Se cumple un ano de la victoria del Frente de Todos en las elecciones presidenciales Telam in Spanish Retrieved 2 January 2021 Como quedo conformado el Congreso despues de las elecciones Pagina 12 in Spanish 28 October 2019 Retrieved 1 January 2021 a b Diputados Nacionales Honorable Camara de Diputados de la Nacion in Spanish Retrieved 1 January 2021 Argento Analia 30 October 2020 Despues de votar a favor del Presupuesto un diputado dejo el bloque de Juntos por el Cambio Infobae in Spanish Retrieved 1 January 2021 El Gobierno avanza con su plan de postergar las PASO y las generales Perfil in Spanish 10 April 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Con el acuerdo del oficialismo y Juntos por el Cambio el Congreso se encamina a modificar el calendario electoral Tiempo Argentino in Spanish 19 May 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Calendario electoral 2021 en la Argentina las fechas de las elecciones de todo el pais La Nacion in Spanish 4 August 2021 Ley simple Voto argentina gob ar in Spanish 12 July 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Dominguez Juan Jose 3 August 2021 Elecciones en pandemia que medidas tomara el Gobierno nacional para una votacion inedita en la Argentina Chequeado in Spanish Retrieved 8 September 2021 Protocolo para ir a votar en las Elecciones PASO 2021 Infobae in Spanish 7 September 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 IPU PARLINE database ARGENTINA Camara de Diputados Electoral system archive ipu org Retrieved 14 February 2021 a b Elecciones legislativas 2021 Que se vota y a quienes se les vence el mandato Ambito in Spanish 30 June 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2021 IPU PARLINE database ARGENTINA Senado Electoral system archive ipu org Retrieved 14 February 2021 What s at stake in Argentina s midterm primary this Sunday Buenos Aires Times 10 September 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Wainfeld Mario 12 September 2021 Como son las PASO y cuanto esta en juego Pagina 12 in Spanish Retrieved 14 September 2021 Grainger James 13 September 2021 Argentina s government suffers heavy defeat in PASO primaries Buenos Aires Times Retrieved 14 September 2021 Rivas Molina Federico 12 September 2021 El kirchnerismo sufre una catastrofe electoral en las primarias en Argentina El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 14 September 2021 Mapa electoral los resultados en todo el pais La Nacion in Spanish Retrieved 14 September 2021 Soriano Fernando 12 September 2021 Celebracion y optimismo en el Frente de Izquierda que se siente a las puertas de una eleccion historica en noviembre Infobae in Spanish Retrieved 14 September 2021 Milei wins 13 of vote in City PASO taking Avanza Libertad into third Buenos Aires Times 13 September 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Se registro la mas baja participacion de ciudadanos en las urnas Telam in Spanish 13 September 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Buenos Aires Times Polling stations close as authorities reveal turnout up to 71 batimes com ar Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Redaccion LA NACION 15 November 2021 Todos los nombres Quienes entran y quienes quedan fuera del Congreso La Nacion in Spanish ISSN 0325 0946 Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Consulta de Escrutinios Definitivos www padron gob ar a b Actas de escrutinio definitivo Camara Nacional Electoral Mid term elections Argentina govt loses Congress majority seeks opposition dialogue today rtl lu Retrieved 15 November 2021 Juntos por el Cambio analiza los resultados y la convocatoria presidencial Tvpublica Archived from the original on 15 November 2021 Buenos Aires Times Macri on election It s the end of one era and the beginning of another www batimes com ar Retrieved 15 November 2021 Argentina s president calls for dialogue with opposition as Senate majority in peril France 24 15 November 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 EMERGING MARKETS Argentine peso slips slightly after ruling party faces defeat in mid terms Archived from the original on 15 November 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2021 Argentine legislative election amp oldid 1190064905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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