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1989 Argentine general election

The Argentine general election of 1989 was held on 14 May 1989. Voters chose both the President and their legislators and with a turnout of 85.3%, Carlos Menem won the presidency, and the Peronist Justicialist Party won the control of both houses of Congress. This is the last presidential election the president was elected by the electoral college.

1989 Argentine general election

Presidential election
← 1983 14 May 1989 1995 →

600 members of the Electoral College
301 votes needed to win
Registered20,034,252
Turnout85.31%
 
Nominee Carlos Menem Eduardo Angeloz Álvaro Alsogaray
Party PJ UCR UCeDe
Alliance FREJUPO UCR + CFI Center Alliance
Running mate Eduardo Duhalde Juan Manuel Casella/
María C. Guzmán
Alberto Natale
Electoral vote 312 234 33
States carried 20 3 + CABA 0
Popular vote 7,957,518 6,213,217 1,200,172
Percentage 47.51% 37.10% 7.17%

Percentage of votes (left) and electoral votes (right) by province.

Legislative election
← 1987 14 May 1989 1991 →

127 of 254 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout85.31%
Party % Seats +/–
Chamber of Deputies
Justicialist Front of Popular Unity

44.82% 66 +5
Radical Civic Union

29.23% 42 −9
Center Alliance

10.79% 10 +2
Independent Federalist Confederation

3.39% 3 +1
United Left

3.49% 1 +1
Socialist Unity

2.71% 0 −1
Others

5.67% 5 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by province

Background edit

Inheriting a difficult legacy from his military predecessors, President Raúl Alfonsín's tenure had been practically defined by the foreign debt Argentina's last dictatorship left behind. Signs of unraveling in Alfonsín's 1985 Austral Plan for economic stabilization cost his centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR) its majorities in the Chamber of Deputies (lower house of Congress) and among the nation's 22 governorships in the September 1987 mid-term elections. Facing a restive armed forces opposed to trials against past human rights abuses and mounting inflation, the president brought elections forward five months, now scheduled for May 14, 1989. Both major parties held national conventions in May 1988. The UCR nominated Córdoba Governor Eduardo Angeloz, a safe, centrist choice and the most prominent UCR figure not closely tied to the unpopular President Alfonsín. In an upset, however, Carlos Menem, governor of the remote and thinly populated La Rioja Province, wrested the Justicialist Party nomination from the odds-on candidate, Buenos Aires Province Governor Antonio Cafiero, a policy maker close to the Justicialists' founder, the late Juan Perón. Cafiero's defeat resulted largely from CGT trade union opposition to his Peronist Renewal faction; Alfonsín's top political adviser, Interior Minister Enrique Nosiglia, in turn saw Menem's flamboyance as an opportunity for the struggling UCR.

The Justicialists (Peronists) took a sizable lead in polling early on, however, even as nearly half the voters remained undecided. Hoping to translate this into a UCR victory over the outspoken and eccentric Menem, President Alfonsín enacted an August 1988 "Springtime Plan" in a bid for lower inflation (then running at 27% monthly). The plan, criticized as a rehashed "Austral Plan" by the CGT, called for budget cuts and renewed wage freezes - policies they blamed for sliding living standards. Initially successful, a record drought late in the year buffeted critical export earnings and led to rolling blackouts, dissipating any gains Angeloz might have made from the "relief" of 6% monthly inflation.

A perennial third-party candidate, conservative economist Álvaro Alsogaray, made gains following the January 1989 assault by Trotskyite militants on the La Tablada Barracks, west of Buenos Aires. Twice minister of the economy and remembered for his belief that the economy must go through "winter," the unpopular Alsogaray ran on a free market platform, calling for mass privatizations and deep cuts in social spending (amid 30% poverty). Angeloz took the controversial decision of including social spending cuts in the UCR platform, as well, earning the right-wing Federal Party's endorsement; but alienating many others (particularly pensioners, among whom Alfonsín had won decisively in 1983). The largely civil campaign became increasingly a debate between the Justicialist nominee and the president, himself; Angeloz, the UCR nominee, remained "presidential" during the frequent exchanges of innuendo between Alfonsín and Menem.

Following a sharp drop in Central Bank reserves, the austral fell around 29% to the U.S. dollar in heavy trading on "black Tuesday," February 7. The sudden drop in the austral's value threatened the nation's tenuous financial stability and, later that month, the World Bank recalled a large tranche of a loan package agreed on in 1988, sending the austral into a tailspin: trading at 17 to the dollar in January, the dollar quoted at over 100 australes by election day, May 14. Inflation, which had been held to the 5-10% monthly range as late as February, rose to 78.5% in May, shattering records and leading to a landslide victory for the Peronists. Polling revealed that economic anxieties were paramount among two-thirds of voters and Menem won in 19 of 22 provinces, while losing in the traditionally anti-Peronist Federal District (Buenos Aires).

The nation's finances did not stabilize after the election, as hoped. The austral halved to the dollar next week, alone, and on May 29, riots broke out in the poorer outskirts of a number of cities. Having declared his intention to stay on until inaugural day, December 10, these events and spiraling financial chaos led Alfonsín to transfer power to President-elect Menem five months early, on July 8. When Menem accepted the presidential sash from Alfonsín, it marked the first time since 1916 that an incumbent government peacefully transferred power to the opposition.[1]

Candidates for presidency edit

Results edit

President edit

Presidential
candidate
Vice Presidential
candidate
Party Popular vote Electoral vote
Votes % Votes %
Carlos Menem Eduardo Duhalde Total Menem - Duhalde 7,957,518 47.51 312 52.00
Justicialist Front of Popular Unity (FREJUPO) 7,841,028 46.81 305 50.83
Renewal Current 113,163 0.68 7 1.17
Labor and People's Party (PTP) 2,770 0.02
Integration and Development Movement (MID) 557 0.00
Eduardo Angeloz Juan Manuel Casella Total Angeloz - Casella 5,434,049 32.44 213 35.50
Radical Civic Union (UCR) 5,162,574 30.82 198 33.00
UCR - Independent Federalist Confederation 220,505 1.32 9 1.50
UCR - Mobilization - Catamarca Popular Movement 50,970 0.30 6 1.00
Álvaro Alsogaray Alberto Natale Total Alsogaray - Natale 1,200,172 7.17 33 6.50
Center Alliance 1,042,984 6.23 28 4.67
Autonomist - Liberal - PDP - Popular Liberation Movement 106,774 0.64 5 0.83
Union of the Democratic Centre (UCeDe) 49,767 0.30
Democratic Progressive Party (PDP) 647 0.00
Eduardo Angeloz María Cristina Guzmán Total Angeloz - Guzmán 779,168 4.66 21 3.50
Independent Federalist Confederation (CFI) 675,101 4.03 21 3.50
Independent Federalist Confederation - Federal Party 93,013 0.56
Federal Party (PF) 11,054 0.07
Néstor Vicente Luis Zamora United Left (IU) 409,250 2.44 1 0.17
José Corzo Gómez Federico Houssay Retirees Target Party (PBJ) 315,600 1.88 7 1.17
Guillermo Estévez Boero Alfredo Bravo Total Estévez Boero - Bravo 240,132 1.43
Socialist Unity (US) 218,950 1.31
Popular Socialist Party (PSP) 15,836 0.09
Socialist Party (PS) 3,600 0.02
Democratic Socialist Party (PSD) 1,746 0.01
Antonio Domingo Bussi Antonio Álvarez Republican Force (FR) 185,036 1.10 7 1.17
Jorge Altamira Gregorio Flores Workers' Party (PO) 45,763 0.27
Luis Alberto Ammann Lía Méndez Humanist - Green Front 42,316 0.25
No candidates Neuquén People's Movement (MPN) 35,466 0.21 4 0.67
Blockist Alliance 27,004 0.16 1 0.17
Chaco Action (ACHA) 19,831 0.12 1 0.17
Renewal Crusade (CR) 11,236 0.07
Ángel Bustelo Eduardo Hernández Total Bustelo - Hernández 10,157 0.06
Popular Action 4,773 0.03
Liberation Socialist Workers' Party (PSOL) 2,715 0.02
Anti-Imperialist Popular Democratic Movement (MODEPA) 1,345 0.01
Popular Accord 1,324 0.01
No candidates Renewal Unit Movement (MUR) 7,661 0.05
Blue, Loyalty, Restoration 7,287 0.04
Independence Party 4,083 0.02
Democratic Party of Jujuy 2,487 0.01
Retirees Party 2,340 0.01
Liberal Democratic Party - Provincial Popular Movement 2,327 0.01
Mario Hugo Geller Elisa Delboy Liberation Party 1,851 0.01
No candidates Renewal Front 1,281 0.01
Tradition and Coherence 1,181 0.01
Social Justice 1,147 0.01
Autonomist Union Front 973 0.01
Provincial Union 966 0.01
Provincial Action 838 0.01
Provincial Defense - White Flag 651 0.00
Fueguino People's Movement (MOPOF) 472 0.00
Nationalist Movement 245 0.00
Populist Unification 243 0.00
Authentic Socialist Party (PSA) 216 0.00
Authentic Formosa Party 181 0.00
Total 16,749,128 100
Positive votes 16,749,128 98.00
Blank votes 222,048 1.30
Invalid votes 116,049 0.68
Tally sheet differences 4,395 0.02
Total votes 17,091,620 100
Registered voters/turnout 20,034,252 85.31
Sources:[2][3]

Chamber of Deputies edit

Party Votes % Seats won Total seats
Justicialist Front of Popular Unity (FREJUPO) 7,460,488 44.82 66 127
Radical Civic Union (UCR) 4,865,835 29.23 42 93
Center Alliance 1,796,271 10.79 10 18
Independent Federalist Confederation (CFI) 565,080 3.39 3 5
United Left (IU) 580,943 3.49 1 1
Socialist Unity (US) 451,177 2.71 1
Retirees Target Party (PBJ) 301,101 1.81 1 1
Republican Force (FR) 213,957 1.29 2 2
Renewal Crusade (CR) 87,273 0.52 1 1
Workers' Party (PO) 53,671 0.32
Humanist - Green Front 49,491 0.30
Neuquén People's Movement (MPN) 49,070 0.29 1 2
Chaco Action (ACHA) 45,298 0.27
Blockist Alliance 39,171 0.24 1
Río Negro Provincial Party (PPR) 22,331 0.13 1
Renewal Unit Movement (MUR) 9,027 0.05
Blue, Loyalty, Restoration 7,638 0.05
Liberal Democratic Party - Provincial Popular Movement 7,359 0.04
Social Justice 5,878 0.04
Renewal Front 4,770 0.03
Independence Party 4,749 0.03
Popular Accord 9,549 0.06
Democratic Party of Jujuy 2,544 0.02
Fueguino People's Movement (MOPOF) 2,309 0.01
Liberation Party (PL) 1,944 0.01
Christian Democratic Party (PDC) 1,831 0.01
Authentic Socialist Party (PSA) 1,666 0.01
Tradition and Coherence 1,426 0.01
Autonomist Union Front 1,149 0.01
Provincial Union 1,002 0.01
Provincial Defense - White Flag (DP-BB) 816 0.00 1
Nationalist Movement 418 0.00
Authentic Formosa Party 246 0.00
Emancipatory Front 38 0.00
Total 16,645,516 100 127 254
Positive votes 16,645,516 97.39
Blank votes 307,578 1.80
Invalid votes 99,482 0.58
Tally sheet differences 39,544 0.23
Total votes 17,092,120 100
Registered voters/turnout 20,034,252 85.31
Sources:[4][3]

Results by province edit

Province FREJUPO UCR Center Alliance CFI Others
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Buenos Aires 3,042,080 48.37 19 1,655,591 26.32 10 630,163 10.02 4 190,445 3.03 770,828 12.25 2
Buenos Aires City 641,767 31.51 5 580,197 28.49 4 449,822 22.09 3 146,540 7.19 1 218,392 10.73
Catamarca 68,098 54.23 2 51,285 40.84 1 1,257 1.00 4,924 3.92
Chaco 190,605 49.17 2 133,986 34.56 2 6,713 1.73 1,651 0.43 54,685 14.10
Chubut 54,583 38.48 1 39,815 28.07 1 9,681 6.82 25,516 17.99 12,257 8.64
Córdoba 664,858 43.37 4 669,338 43.67 5 120,759 7.88 77,905 5.08
Corrientes 120,807 32.58 1 89,798 24.22 1 151,613 40.89 1 3,371 0.91 5,184 1.40
Entre Ríos 283,517 50.49 3 208,634 37.15 2 46,864 8.34 22,567 4.02
Formosa 93,949 58.46 1 63,155 39.30 1 2,000 1.24 1,589 0.99
Jujuy 84,266 41.75 2 31,687 15.70 2,734 1.35 41,724 20.67 1 41,407 20.52
La Pampa 73,413 51.11 2 53,144 37.00 1 7,488 5.21 2,799 1.95 6,802 4.73
La Rioja 69,062 67.14 2 29,406 28.59 1,315 1.28 16 0.02 3,062 2.97
Mendoza 291,673 42.04 2 203,392 29.31 2 141,237 20.36 1 3,494 0.50 54,048 7.79
Misiones 162,361 52.21 2 115,401 37.11 1 20,080 6.46 7,158 2.30 5,965 1.92
Neuquén 54,347 36.47 1 35,600 23.89 1 4,815 3.23 54,276 36.42 1
Río Negro 85,129 42.95 1 71,968 36.31 1 9,799 4.94 31,322 15.80
Salta 154,116 42.66 1 91,225 25.25 1 7,647 2.12 88,294 24.44 1 20,005 5.54
San Juan 64,740 24.47 1 48,174 18.21 1 18,749 7.09 132,857 50.23 1
San Luis 66,337 48.34 2 52,564 38.30 1 5,201 3.79 13,129 9.57
Santa Cruz 32,933 52.94 2 23,964 38.52 1 3,102 4.99 2,207 3.55
Santa Fe 740,538 48.01 5 438,268 28.41 3 144,393 9.36 1 14,494 0.94 204,834 13.28
Santiago del Estero 195,471 65.49 2 87,920 29.46 1 2,394 0.80 3,219 1.08 9,469 3.17
Tierra del Fuego 10,989 39.51 1 8,444 30.36 1 2,023 7.27 318 1.14 6,039 21.72
Tucumán 214,849 39.47 2 82,879 15.23 6,422 1.18 36,041 6.62 204,089 37.50 2
Total 7,460,488 44.82 66 4,865,835 29.23 42 1,796,271 10.79 10 565,080 3.39 3 1,957,842 11.77 6

Notes edit

  1. ^ Todo Argentina
  2. ^ . Dirección Nacional Electoral. Archived from the original on 2017-09-26. Retrieved 2017-09-25.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Ministry of the Interior. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2018.
  4. ^ . Dirección Nacional Electoral. Archived from the original on 2019-09-17. Retrieved 2020-12-16.

1989, argentine, general, election, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1989 Argentine general election news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Argentine general election of 1989 was held on 14 May 1989 Voters chose both the President and their legislators and with a turnout of 85 3 Carlos Menem won the presidency and the Peronist Justicialist Party won the control of both houses of Congress This is the last presidential election the president was elected by the electoral college 1989 Argentine general electionPresidential election 1983 14 May 1989 1995 600 members of the Electoral College301 votes needed to winRegistered20 034 252Turnout85 31 Nominee Carlos Menem Eduardo Angeloz Alvaro AlsogarayParty PJ UCR UCeDeAlliance FREJUPO UCR CFI Center AllianceRunning mate Eduardo Duhalde Juan Manuel Casella Maria C Guzman Alberto NataleElectoral vote 312 234 33States carried 20 3 CABA 0Popular vote 7 957 518 6 213 217 1 200 172Percentage 47 51 37 10 7 17 Percentage of votes left and electoral votes right by province President before electionRaul AlfonsinUCR Elected President Carlos MenemPJLegislative election 1987 14 May 1989 1991 127 of 254 seats in the Chamber of DeputiesTurnout85 31 Party Seats Chamber of DeputiesJusticialist Front of Popular Unity 44 82 66 5Radical Civic Union 29 23 42 9Center Alliance 10 79 10 2Independent Federalist Confederation 3 39 3 1United Left 3 49 1 1Socialist Unity 2 71 0 1Others 5 67 5 1This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below Results by province Contents 1 Background 2 Candidates for presidency 3 Results 3 1 President 3 2 Chamber of Deputies 3 2 1 Results by province 4 NotesBackground editInheriting a difficult legacy from his military predecessors President Raul Alfonsin s tenure had been practically defined by the foreign debt Argentina s last dictatorship left behind Signs of unraveling in Alfonsin s 1985 Austral Plan for economic stabilization cost his centrist Radical Civic Union UCR its majorities in the Chamber of Deputies lower house of Congress and among the nation s 22 governorships in the September 1987 mid term elections Facing a restive armed forces opposed to trials against past human rights abuses and mounting inflation the president brought elections forward five months now scheduled for May 14 1989 Both major parties held national conventions in May 1988 The UCR nominated Cordoba Governor Eduardo Angeloz a safe centrist choice and the most prominent UCR figure not closely tied to the unpopular President Alfonsin In an upset however Carlos Menem governor of the remote and thinly populated La Rioja Province wrested the Justicialist Party nomination from the odds on candidate Buenos Aires Province Governor Antonio Cafiero a policy maker close to the Justicialists founder the late Juan Peron Cafiero s defeat resulted largely from CGT trade union opposition to his Peronist Renewal faction Alfonsin s top political adviser Interior Minister Enrique Nosiglia in turn saw Menem s flamboyance as an opportunity for the struggling UCR The Justicialists Peronists took a sizable lead in polling early on however even as nearly half the voters remained undecided Hoping to translate this into a UCR victory over the outspoken and eccentric Menem President Alfonsin enacted an August 1988 Springtime Plan in a bid for lower inflation then running at 27 monthly The plan criticized as a rehashed Austral Plan by the CGT called for budget cuts and renewed wage freezes policies they blamed for sliding living standards Initially successful a record drought late in the year buffeted critical export earnings and led to rolling blackouts dissipating any gains Angeloz might have made from the relief of 6 monthly inflation A perennial third party candidate conservative economist Alvaro Alsogaray made gains following the January 1989 assault by Trotskyite militants on the La Tablada Barracks west of Buenos Aires Twice minister of the economy and remembered for his belief that the economy must go through winter the unpopular Alsogaray ran on a free market platform calling for mass privatizations and deep cuts in social spending amid 30 poverty Angeloz took the controversial decision of including social spending cuts in the UCR platform as well earning the right wing Federal Party s endorsement but alienating many others particularly pensioners among whom Alfonsin had won decisively in 1983 The largely civil campaign became increasingly a debate between the Justicialist nominee and the president himself Angeloz the UCR nominee remained presidential during the frequent exchanges of innuendo between Alfonsin and Menem Following a sharp drop in Central Bank reserves the austral fell around 29 to the U S dollar in heavy trading on black Tuesday February 7 The sudden drop in the austral s value threatened the nation s tenuous financial stability and later that month the World Bank recalled a large tranche of a loan package agreed on in 1988 sending the austral into a tailspin trading at 17 to the dollar in January the dollar quoted at over 100 australes by election day May 14 Inflation which had been held to the 5 10 monthly range as late as February rose to 78 5 in May shattering records and leading to a landslide victory for the Peronists Polling revealed that economic anxieties were paramount among two thirds of voters and Menem won in 19 of 22 provinces while losing in the traditionally anti Peronist Federal District Buenos Aires The nation s finances did not stabilize after the election as hoped The austral halved to the dollar next week alone and on May 29 riots broke out in the poorer outskirts of a number of cities Having declared his intention to stay on until inaugural day December 10 these events and spiraling financial chaos led Alfonsin to transfer power to President elect Menem five months early on July 8 When Menem accepted the presidential sash from Alfonsin it marked the first time since 1916 that an incumbent government peacefully transferred power to the opposition 1 Candidates for presidency editJusticialist Party Peronist populist Governor Carlos Menem of La Rioja Province Radical Civic Union Center left social liberal Governor Eduardo Angeloz of Cordoba Province Union of the Democratic Centre Center right conservative liberal Deputy Alvaro Alsogaray of the City of Buenos AiresResults editPresident edit Presidentialcandidate Vice Presidentialcandidate Party Popular vote Electoral voteVotes Votes Carlos Menem Eduardo Duhalde Total Menem Duhalde 7 957 518 47 51 312 52 00Justicialist Front of Popular Unity FREJUPO 7 841 028 46 81 305 50 83Renewal Current 113 163 0 68 7 1 17Labor and People s Party PTP 2 770 0 02Integration and Development Movement MID 557 0 00Eduardo Angeloz Juan Manuel Casella Total Angeloz Casella 5 434 049 32 44 213 35 50Radical Civic Union UCR 5 162 574 30 82 198 33 00UCR Independent Federalist Confederation 220 505 1 32 9 1 50UCR Mobilization Catamarca Popular Movement 50 970 0 30 6 1 00Alvaro Alsogaray Alberto Natale Total Alsogaray Natale 1 200 172 7 17 33 6 50Center Alliance 1 042 984 6 23 28 4 67Autonomist Liberal PDP Popular Liberation Movement 106 774 0 64 5 0 83Union of the Democratic Centre UCeDe 49 767 0 30Democratic Progressive Party PDP 647 0 00Eduardo Angeloz Maria Cristina Guzman Total Angeloz Guzman 779 168 4 66 21 3 50Independent Federalist Confederation CFI 675 101 4 03 21 3 50Independent Federalist Confederation Federal Party 93 013 0 56Federal Party PF 11 054 0 07Nestor Vicente Luis Zamora United Left IU 409 250 2 44 1 0 17Jose Corzo Gomez Federico Houssay Retirees Target Party PBJ 315 600 1 88 7 1 17Guillermo Estevez Boero Alfredo Bravo Total Estevez Boero Bravo 240 132 1 43Socialist Unity US 218 950 1 31Popular Socialist Party PSP 15 836 0 09Socialist Party PS 3 600 0 02Democratic Socialist Party PSD 1 746 0 01Antonio Domingo Bussi Antonio Alvarez Republican Force FR 185 036 1 10 7 1 17Jorge Altamira Gregorio Flores Workers Party PO 45 763 0 27Luis Alberto Ammann Lia Mendez Humanist Green Front 42 316 0 25No candidates Neuquen People s Movement MPN 35 466 0 21 4 0 67Blockist Alliance 27 004 0 16 1 0 17Chaco Action ACHA 19 831 0 12 1 0 17Renewal Crusade CR 11 236 0 07Angel Bustelo Eduardo Hernandez Total Bustelo Hernandez 10 157 0 06Popular Action 4 773 0 03Liberation Socialist Workers Party PSOL 2 715 0 02Anti Imperialist Popular Democratic Movement MODEPA 1 345 0 01Popular Accord 1 324 0 01No candidates Renewal Unit Movement MUR 7 661 0 05Blue Loyalty Restoration 7 287 0 04Independence Party 4 083 0 02Democratic Party of Jujuy 2 487 0 01Retirees Party 2 340 0 01Liberal Democratic Party Provincial Popular Movement 2 327 0 01Mario Hugo Geller Elisa Delboy Liberation Party 1 851 0 01No candidates Renewal Front 1 281 0 01Tradition and Coherence 1 181 0 01Social Justice 1 147 0 01Autonomist Union Front 973 0 01Provincial Union 966 0 01Provincial Action 838 0 01Provincial Defense White Flag 651 0 00Fueguino People s Movement MOPOF 472 0 00Nationalist Movement 245 0 00Populist Unification 243 0 00Authentic Socialist Party PSA 216 0 00Authentic Formosa Party 181 0 00Total 16 749 128 100Positive votes 16 749 128 98 00Blank votes 222 048 1 30Invalid votes 116 049 0 68Tally sheet differences 4 395 0 02Total votes 17 091 620 100Registered voters turnout 20 034 252 85 31Sources 2 3 Chamber of Deputies edit Party Votes Seats won Total seatsJusticialist Front of Popular Unity FREJUPO 7 460 488 44 82 66 127Radical Civic Union UCR 4 865 835 29 23 42 93Center Alliance 1 796 271 10 79 10 18Independent Federalist Confederation CFI 565 080 3 39 3 5United Left IU 580 943 3 49 1 1Socialist Unity US 451 177 2 71 1Retirees Target Party PBJ 301 101 1 81 1 1Republican Force FR 213 957 1 29 2 2Renewal Crusade CR 87 273 0 52 1 1Workers Party PO 53 671 0 32 Humanist Green Front 49 491 0 30 Neuquen People s Movement MPN 49 070 0 29 1 2Chaco Action ACHA 45 298 0 27 Blockist Alliance 39 171 0 24 1Rio Negro Provincial Party PPR 22 331 0 13 1Renewal Unit Movement MUR 9 027 0 05 Blue Loyalty Restoration 7 638 0 05 Liberal Democratic Party Provincial Popular Movement 7 359 0 04 Social Justice 5 878 0 04 Renewal Front 4 770 0 03 Independence Party 4 749 0 03 Popular Accord 9 549 0 06 Democratic Party of Jujuy 2 544 0 02 Fueguino People s Movement MOPOF 2 309 0 01 Liberation Party PL 1 944 0 01 Christian Democratic Party PDC 1 831 0 01 Authentic Socialist Party PSA 1 666 0 01 Tradition and Coherence 1 426 0 01 Autonomist Union Front 1 149 0 01 Provincial Union 1 002 0 01 Provincial Defense White Flag DP BB 816 0 00 1Nationalist Movement 418 0 00 Authentic Formosa Party 246 0 00 Emancipatory Front 38 0 00 Total 16 645 516 100 127 254Positive votes 16 645 516 97 39Blank votes 307 578 1 80Invalid votes 99 482 0 58Tally sheet differences 39 544 0 23Total votes 17 092 120 100Registered voters turnout 20 034 252 85 31Sources 4 3 Results by province edit Province FREJUPO UCR Center Alliance CFI OthersVotes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes Seats Votes SeatsBuenos Aires 3 042 080 48 37 19 1 655 591 26 32 10 630 163 10 02 4 190 445 3 03 770 828 12 25 2Buenos Aires City 641 767 31 51 5 580 197 28 49 4 449 822 22 09 3 146 540 7 19 1 218 392 10 73 Catamarca 68 098 54 23 2 51 285 40 84 1 1 257 1 00 4 924 3 92 Chaco 190 605 49 17 2 133 986 34 56 2 6 713 1 73 1 651 0 43 54 685 14 10 Chubut 54 583 38 48 1 39 815 28 07 1 9 681 6 82 25 516 17 99 12 257 8 64 Cordoba 664 858 43 37 4 669 338 43 67 5 120 759 7 88 77 905 5 08 Corrientes 120 807 32 58 1 89 798 24 22 1 151 613 40 89 1 3 371 0 91 5 184 1 40 Entre Rios 283 517 50 49 3 208 634 37 15 2 46 864 8 34 22 567 4 02 Formosa 93 949 58 46 1 63 155 39 30 1 2 000 1 24 1 589 0 99 Jujuy 84 266 41 75 2 31 687 15 70 2 734 1 35 41 724 20 67 1 41 407 20 52 La Pampa 73 413 51 11 2 53 144 37 00 1 7 488 5 21 2 799 1 95 6 802 4 73 La Rioja 69 062 67 14 2 29 406 28 59 1 315 1 28 16 0 02 3 062 2 97 Mendoza 291 673 42 04 2 203 392 29 31 2 141 237 20 36 1 3 494 0 50 54 048 7 79 Misiones 162 361 52 21 2 115 401 37 11 1 20 080 6 46 7 158 2 30 5 965 1 92 Neuquen 54 347 36 47 1 35 600 23 89 1 4 815 3 23 54 276 36 42 1Rio Negro 85 129 42 95 1 71 968 36 31 1 9 799 4 94 31 322 15 80 Salta 154 116 42 66 1 91 225 25 25 1 7 647 2 12 88 294 24 44 1 20 005 5 54 San Juan 64 740 24 47 1 48 174 18 21 1 18 749 7 09 132 857 50 23 1San Luis 66 337 48 34 2 52 564 38 30 1 5 201 3 79 13 129 9 57 Santa Cruz 32 933 52 94 2 23 964 38 52 1 3 102 4 99 2 207 3 55 Santa Fe 740 538 48 01 5 438 268 28 41 3 144 393 9 36 1 14 494 0 94 204 834 13 28 Santiago del Estero 195 471 65 49 2 87 920 29 46 1 2 394 0 80 3 219 1 08 9 469 3 17 Tierra del Fuego 10 989 39 51 1 8 444 30 36 1 2 023 7 27 318 1 14 6 039 21 72 Tucuman 214 849 39 47 2 82 879 15 23 6 422 1 18 36 041 6 62 204 089 37 50 2Total 7 460 488 44 82 66 4 865 835 29 23 42 1 796 271 10 79 10 565 080 3 39 3 1 957 842 11 77 6Notes edit Todo Argentina Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013 Presidenciales Direccion Nacional Electoral Archived from the original on 2017 09 26 Retrieved 2017 09 25 a b Elecciones Nacionales ESCRUTINIO DEFINITIVO 1989 PDF Ministry of the Interior Archived from the original PDF on 30 March 2018 Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013 Diputados Nacionales Direccion Nacional Electoral Archived from the original on 2019 09 17 Retrieved 2020 12 16 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1989 Argentine general election amp oldid 1184827352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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