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Politics of Argentina

The politics of Argentina take place in the framework of what the Constitution defines as a federal presidential representative democratic republic, where the President of Argentina is both Head of State and Head of Government. Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of the Argentine National Congress. The Judiciary is independent, as are the Executive and the Legislature. Elections take place regularly on a multi-party system.

In the 20th century, Argentina experienced significant political turmoil and democratic reversals.[1][2][3] Between 1930 and 1976, the armed forces overthrew six governments in Argentina;[2] and the country alternated periods of democracy (1912–1930, 1946–1955, and 1973–1976) with periods of restricted democracy and military rule.[1]

Following a transition that began in 1983,[4] full-scale democracy in Argentina was reestablished.[1][2] Argentina's democracy endured through the 2001–02 crisis and to the present day; it is regarded as more robust than both its pre-1983 predecessors and other democracies in Latin America.[2]

National government edit

The government structure of Argentina is a democracy; it contains the three branches of government.[5]

Executive branch edit

The current Chief of State and Head of Government is President Javier Milei.[6]

 
Pink House, seats the executive power.

Legislative branch edit

Legislative Branch is a bicameral Congress, which consists of the Senate (72 seats), presided by the vice-president, and the Chamber of Deputies (257 seats), currently presided by Martín Menem of the La Rioja Province. The General Auditing Office of the Nation and the Ombudsman are also part of this branch. Deputies serve for 4 years, while Senators serve for 6 years.[7]

 
Argentine National Congress, seats the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.

Judiciary branch edit

The Judiciary Branch is composed of federal judges and others with different jurisdictions, and a Supreme Court with five judges, appointed by the President with approval of the Senate, who may be deposed by Congress.[8]

 
Supreme Court of Argentina.

Provincial and municipal governments edit

Argentina is divided into 23 Provinces, the equivalent of States, and one autonomous district, CABA, inside the Buenos Aires province. Because of Argentina’s federal structure, every province has its own constitution, and authorities.[9]

Each province, except for Buenos Aires Province, is divided into departments (departamentos), or districts, which are in turn divided into municipalities. The Buenos Aires Province is different, its territory is divided into 134 districts called partidos, not municipalities.[9]

Through Law 27589 decreed in 2020, 24 Alternate Federal Capitals are established in Argentina, which constitutes the country consolidating with a total of 25 Federal Capitals. Among them, the main administrative and autonomous Federal Capital, which is the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, plus 24 Alternate Federal Capitals, one of which represents the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires (AMBA) and each of the remaining 23 is located in a different province on behalf of the same. In the 24 Alternate Federal Capitals, the industrial offices of the province are established in representation, where the negotiations in question are carried out. In addition, as part of the conditions established by law, the government must move to one of the Alternate Federal Capitals each month.[citation needed]

History edit

Argentina's first government, autonomous from the Spanish Crown, can be traced back to May 1810 and the May Revolution, where an assembly of Argentines, called Primera Junta, took power.[10] Because at the time it was difficult to find the right form of government, and even more difficult to consolidate a Republic, Argentina experimented with different forms of assembly, like juntas and triumvirates.[10] The 9th of July 1816, half of Argentina's provinces signed a declaration of independence.[11] The beginnings of Argentine state building were rough and many provinces refused to answer to a central government and sign the first constitution of 1826. In 1853, after several years of centralist power, a new constitution was passed, this one consolidated, almost fully, the Argentine Nation. Buenos Aires, still refused to be considered part of the country. After the Battle of Pavón in 1861, Buenos Aires set terms for its inclusion in the Constitution and the Republic of Argentina was born, with Bartolome Mitre as the President.[10]

Argentina is an example where institutional instability was established after an initial period of historical contingencies. Some random insignificant historical event favors one set of institutions at the beginning. Organizations became dependent on the framework of current institutions and made further investments to profit, making it undesirably costly to switch to other types of institutions.[12] This means that the other potentially better alternative will be unable to catch up later.[13] Consequently, increasing returns gradually locks the economy (or political institutions) to an outcome that is not necessarily superior. People altered their expectations and stopped investing in the system as the country experienced decades of regime changes after the 1930s, seeing both rules and rule-making processes being repeatedly overturned.[14]

Weakly enforced institutions are by design in some cases for domestic support.[15] For example, anti-abortion was a punitive law in Argentina because many people recognize it as morally legitimate. The government put no resources into enforcing the rules, which allows the middle class to abort pregnancies in private clinics.[16] On the other hand, strong enforcement might undermine the stability of regimes. Between 1930 and 1943, Argentine conservatives maintained power via fraud-ridden elections. After 1943, electoral rules were followed, leading to powerful actors repeatedly modifying the electoral institutions for their benefit.[17]

Liberal state edit

From 1852 until 1930 Argentina experienced liberal government with first oligarchic and then democratic tendencies.[18] From 1852 to 1916 the government, run by the landowning elite, controlled the outcome of elections by committing fraud. This was contested by the rising middle-class and working-class sectors. This fueled the creation of more unions and political parties, including the Radical Civic Union (UCR), which represented the emergent middle-class.[18] In 1912, Law 8871, or the Sáenz Peña Law established universal, secret and obligatory male suffrage, which marked the middle classes entering the government, and displacing the landowning elite.[19]

Welfare state edit

Since the 1930s coups d'état have disrupted this democracy. After World War II and Juan Perón's presidency, recurring economic and institutional crises fostered the rise of military regimes. In 1930, the elected president Hipolito Yrigoyen was ousted by a right-wing led coup.[10] In 1931 the new government held controlled elections and blocked the participation of Yrigoyen's party. This alleged elections gave way to the Concordancia, a three-party regime. They controlled the Argentine government, through fraud and rigged elections, until 1943.[10] Several factors, including the deaths of the most prominent leaders and World War II, led to another coup that ended the Concordancia regime.[10] This coup was led by the army, which supported the Axis powers, and modeled the new government after Italy's fascist regime.[18] Among the military leaders was Juan Perón, who was in charge of the Secretariat of Labor and Social Welfare. He veered off the path set by the conservative army and set forth to improve the living and working conditions of workers, including giving Labor Unions support and governmental positions. He was jailed briefly, but after mass protests, he became president in the elections of 1946. His regime is known as a populist one, aided by the figure of his second wife, Eva Perón, or "Evita". Their regime produced economic growth and improvements on living and working conditions. It also passed female suffrage (1947), and nationalized the central bank, electricity and gas, urban transport, railroads, and the telephone.[18] After the death of his wife, Perón started losing support. He was ousted in 1955 by another coup. Peronism lives on in Argentina. The next stage of the Social State was one characterized by both economic and political instability.[18] Peron regained power in 1973, but died a year later. His third wife, Isabel, became president. She could not run the country and the military took power once again in 1976.[18]

Neoliberal state edit

Jorge Rafael Videla's dictatorship began in 1976 but fell into decline in 1982 after a defeat in the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas/Guerra del Atlántico Sur, 1982), and ended in 1983 with the democratic election of President Raúl Alfonsín of the Radical Civic Union party (UCR). Alfonsín faced significant challenges, including a military uprising, and resigned in 1989, six months before the end of his term, but the country was not in clear danger of becoming subject to a dictatorship again. Carlos Menem of the Justicialist Party (Peronist) served as president for ten years (1989-1999) and made a pact with Alfonsín in order to achieve a 1994 constitutional reform that would allow him to be re-elected. Following a neoliberal program, he ruled until 1999, and then Fernando de la Rúa of the Alianza, led by the UCR, won election. This marked the first time in decades that an Argentine president properly finished his term and passed on his charge to another democratically elected president.[citation needed]

De la Rúa mismanaged the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression and resigned on December 21, 2001, amid violent riots. Several short-lived interim presidents came and went until Congress chose Eduardo Duhalde of the Justicialist Party (Peronist) to rule until some sort of social and economic peace could be restored. Duhalde took care of the most critical matters and called for democratic elections, which Néstor Kirchner of the Justicialist Party won (in the first use of the ballotage system). Kirchner took office on 25 May 2003. In December 2007 he stepped down to allow his wife Cristina Fernández de Kirchner to win election in his place.[citation needed]

Elections and voting edit

Elections edit

Elections in Argentina have been regular since the reinstitution of democracy in 1983. Because it is a "federal" republic Argentina has national, provincial, municipal and Ciudad de Buenos Aires elections.[20] For legislative positions elections are every two years, and for the executive power and governors every 4.[20]

Apart from General elections, and ballotage, Argentines also vote in P.A.S.O. elections (Primary, open, simultaneous, and obligatory elections). This is an instance before every type of election, to decide which candidates will participate in the general elections. Political parties need to get at least 1,5% of valid votes to compete in general elections.[21]

There are 16,508 elected public service positions. In the National level: President and Vice President, 72 senators and 257 deputies. In the Provincial level: 48 positions for Governor and Deputy Governor, 232 senators, 944 deputies and 72 other elective positions in the provinces of Tierra del Fuego, Córdoba, Mendoza, and La Pampa. Out of the 23 provinces and CABA, 15 have unicameral legislatures, they do not have senatorial elections, and 9 have bicameral legislatures. In the Municipal level: 1.122 mayors and 8.488 city councils. Other authorities add up to 5.271 positions, such as the ones in municipal commissions in 10 provinces, and members of school commissions and accounts tribunals in 5 provinces.[22]

In 2017 Argentina passed a bill that imposed gender parity in national elections in order to reach equal participation in Congress. The bill stipulates that all the lists of candidates for Congress must alternate between male and female candidates, and that half of the list of candidates for national positions have to be made up of women.[23]

Voting edit

In Argentina voting is obligatory for any Argentine, either native or naturalized, that is 18 years old. In November 2012, the government passed a new law that allowed Argentines between the ages of 16–18 to vote optionally.[24]

In the 2015 national elections, voter turnout was particularly high: Chamber of Deputies 74.18%, Senate 79.83%, Presidential (1st Round) 78.66%, Presidential (2nd Round) 80.90%.[25]

Political parties edit

Political parties edit

Argentina's two largest political parties are the Justicialist Party (Partido Justicialista, PJ), which evolved out of Juan Perón's efforts in the 1940s to expand the role of labor in the political process (see Peronism), and the Radical Civic Union (Unión Cívica Radical, UCR), founded in 1891. Traditionally, the UCR had more urban middle-class support and the PJ more labor support, but as of 2011 both parties are broadly based. Most of the numerous political parties that emerged in the past two decades have their origins or even the bulk of their identity tied to them.

Smaller parties occupy various positions on the political spectrum and a number of them operate only in certain districts. In the years after Perón's first years in office, several provincial parties emerged, often as a vehicle for the continued activities of Peronists, whose party was then banned, or as coalitions of politicians from all sectors wishing to take forward provincial interests. Provincial parties grew in popularity and number after the return of democracy in 1983, and took several of the provincial governor positions. Both these parties and the provincial branches of the UCR and PJ have frequently been dominated by modern caudillos and family dynasties, such as the Sapags of Neuquén and the Rodríguez Saá's of San Luis. This has in turn been a factor in the ongoing factionalism within the two principal parties at national and local levels.

Historically, the organized labor (largely tied to the Justicialist Party) and the armed forces have also played significant roles in national life. Labor's political power was significantly weakened by free market reforms during the 1990s, as well as the cooptation of its leaders by the Menem administration. They now seem to be returning to their former position, since the current government focuses on a productive model with local industry as one of the top priorities.

The armed forces are firmly under civilian control. Repudiated by the public after a period of military rule marked by human rights violations, economic decline, and military defeat, the Argentine military today is a downsized, volunteer force focused largely on international peacekeeping. While Menem and de la Rúa simply reduced their funding, Kirchner has effected an "ideological cleansing", removing a large portion of the top ranks and replacing them with younger leaders with an explicit commitment to preserve human rights and submit to the decisions of the civilian government.

A grouping of left-leaning parties and dissident Peronists –the Front for a Country in Solidarity (Frente por un País Solidario, FREPASO)– emerged in the 1990s as a serious third party, coming second in the 1995 Presidential elections. In August 1997 the UCR and FREPASO joined in a coalition called Alliance for Work, Justice and Education (informally Alianza, Alliance). The Alliance succeeded in taking Fernando de la Rúa (UCR) to the presidency in 1999, with Carlos Chacho Álvarez (FrePaSo) as vice president. Shortly after, in October 2000 Álvarez resigned after a scandal related to presidential bribes in the Senate (the President's party refused to support or investigate the accusations), so the Alliance (and even the FrePaSo) effectively broke down. Moreover, in the midst of serious economic crisis and riots, President Fernando de la Rúa resigned on December 21, 2001, leaving the UCR reputation severely damaged. The centennial party lost many of its supporters and a bunch of smaller parties emerged from its ashes.

Two of them scored well in the 2003 presidential election: Support for an Egalitarian Republic (ARI), formed on the initiative of Deputy Elisa Carrió, presented itself as a non-compromising front against corruption and for progressive ideas. ARI somewhat took the center left positions of the defunct Alliance in the ideological spectrum. In those elections, Carrió came a close fourth in. Her influence diminished afterward, as the Néstor Kirchner administration -running on center left policies- succeeded, and she took a more conservative stance, eventually dividing her party and founding a new alliance, the Civic Coalition. In June 2007, Fabiana Ríos, a National Deputy enrolled in ARI, was elected Governor of the Province of Tierra del Fuego, becoming the first governor belonging to this party.

The other splinter UCR party, called Recrear, was led by former De la Rúa Minister of Economy Ricardo López Murphy. Recrear captured the urban moderate right-wing spectrum of voters. López Murphy came third in the 2003 presidential elections, with a platform that emphasized transparency, polarizing with former President Carlos Menem. After meagre results for his 2005 senatorial candidacy, and ahead of the 2007 elections, he joined a group of Province-based parties and Macri's Commitment to Change in a new centre-right coalition dubbed Republican Proposal (Propuesta Republicana, PRO). On that ticket, Macri was elected Chief of government of Buenos Aires Autonomous City.

Since the 2008 agricultural sector strikes, political support for President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and her husband, ex-president Néstor Kirchner, diminished considerably. The tax on agricultural exports divided the National Congress as much as the public opinion. On 27 July 2008, the tax reform was put down by a votation at the Senate, which came to be decided by the vote of Vice President Julio Cobos, effectively breaking the governmental coalition Plural Consensus. Since then, a fraction of dissident peronists allied with conservative PRO, Julio Cobos -through Federal Consensus (ConFe)- started negotiations with his former party, UCR. The Radical Civic Union, in turn, formalized an alliance with the Socialist Party and Elisa Carrió's Civic Coalition, styled the Civic and Social Agreement (Acuerdo Cívico y Social, ACyS).

For the 2009 legislative elections, former President Kirchner ran himself as a candidate to National Deputy on top of the Front for Victory (Frente para la Victoria, FPV) party in the Province of Buenos Aires. After the defeat of FPV in the 2015 presidential elections, Cristina Kirchen decided to form another party called Citizen's Unity. She ran as senator of Santa Cruz with this party and won.[26]

Latest presidential elections edit

Summary of the 2023 Argentine general election

CandidateRunning matePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Sergio MassaAgustín RossiUnion for the Homeland9,853,49236.7811,598,72044.35
Javier MileiVictoria VillarruelLa Libertad Avanza8,034,99029.9914,554,56055.65
Patricia BullrichLuis PetriJuntos por el Cambio6,379,02323.81
Juan SchiarettiFlorencio RandazzoHacemos por Nuestro País1,802,0686.73
Myriam BregmanNicolás del CañoWorkers' Left Front722,0612.70
Total26,791,634100.0026,153,280100.00
Valid votes26,791,63496.8626,153,28096.79
Invalid votes451,4861.63450,7461.67
Blank votes415,7371.50417,5741.55
Total votes27,658,857100.0027,021,600100.00
Registered voters/turnout35,854,12277.1435,405,39876.32
Source: [27][28][29]

Policy edit

Policy in Argentina after the several military dictatorships has been varied and has aimed at stabilizing the country. As stated above, Argentina's politics do not lead to a particular side, but instead take the country in many directions. Since the last military junta gave up its power in 1983, each administration that has been in power has had different priorities. President Alfonsín took office in 1983 and his main task was to ensure a peaceful transition. In the end he was overcome by an economic crisis that led to a bout of hyperinflation.

After Alfonsin, came President Menem who had to control inflation and stabilize the economy. He did so by adopting a series of radical measures including fixed parity between the Argentine peso and the U.S. dollar. He then engaged in a program to move Argentina's economy towards a liberal model. This plan included the privatization of the previously state-owned telecommunications company, oil conglomerate (YPF), airline (Aerolíneas Argentinas), railroads and utilities. As a result, large foreign direct investment flowed into Argentina for a short time, improving in some isolated cases the infrastructure and quality of service of those companies. His policies culminated in the highest unemployment rates of Argentine history and the doubling of external debt.

In the social arena, Menem pardoned military officers serving sentences for human rights abuses of the Dirty War. To balance the unpopular decision, he also pardoned some of the insurgents convicted of guerrilla attacks in the 1970s. The public scandal after the assassination of the soldier Omar Carrasco forced Menem to end compulsory military conscription.

Menem's administration was regarded by many[quantify] as corrupt and frivolous. Many members of his administrations have been indicted for profiteering while in office. Despite the large amount of evidence that Menem had personally profited illegally from his administration, he has never been legally convicted. The executive had a visible influence on the decisions of the judiciary, especially the Supreme Court, and displayed a certain contempt for political minorities. Moreover, it did nothing to reduce political corruption and inefficiency, one of the most important and oldest problems in the Argentine government (Argentina's Corruption Perceptions Index for 1999 was 3 out of 10, ranking 71st in a survey of 99 countries)."Transparency International (TI)1999 Corruption Perceptions Index". Internet Center for Corruption Research.

Fernando de la Rúa's term was notoriously ineffective on many accounts. Elected with a popular mandate to reinvigorate the economy and crack down on the corruption of the Menem administration, de la Rúa was unable or unwilling to perform these tasks. He continued on the same economic course of Menem, which ultimately led to the 2001 economic crash and de la Rúa's resignation. The FrePaSo ministers of the administration, elected on a wave of hope for social changes, also disappointed with a perceived lack of investment in social schemes.

Eduardo Duhalde's interim term was strongly limited by a highly mobilized society. It was marked by the need to pacify the country and soften the impact of the crisis after the forced devaluation of the local currency, the peso, which had lost three quarters of its value in a matter of months. Duhalde employed a mixture of traditional Peronist politics (in the form of a monetary subsidy for heads of families) and neo-Keynesian economic principles to stabilize the economy and bring peace to the streets.

Néstor Kirchner, who belonged to the moderate center-left wing of Peronism (rooted in the leftist Peronist factions of the 1970s), continued Duhalde's measures (even keeping his Minister of Economy, Roberto Lavagna) and added some heterodox economics. Heavy taxes on exports have served to keep local prices of valuable commodities in check, while collecting huge revenues (especially from oil products and agricultural exports like soybeans). The restrictive monetary policy of the 1990s has become aggressively expansive; the Central Bank has injected large amounts of cash into the economy and bought dollars from the free currency market in order to accumulate reserves. The fiscal policy is also expansive; the government has raised private and public salaries by decree on several occasions, and has encouraged negotiations between the private sector and the labor movements. Inflation has again become a concern. The government has struck price-freezing agreements with certain sectors of the economy (producers of milk, some foods, natural gas, etc.) and put heavy pressure on others. Failure to comply on the part of Argentine beef producers has been met with a punitive suspension of exports, starting March 2006, intended to increase domestic supply (this was then softened to a quota system).

Cristina Fernández de Kirchner came after her husband with even more liberal policies. She strictly imposed import regulations to encourage local production and exports. She started talks with financial officials to pay off Argentina's debt and promised foreign investment. In 2012, the move to nationalize YPF, an oil firm, scared off the foreign investors.[30] She launched a conditional cash transfer program as well, called Asignación Universal por Hijo (AUH), which provided financial incentives to low-income or poor citizens for them to send their children to school and get vaccinated. During her presidency, same-sex marriage was legalized, and a new law was passed that allowed name and sex change in official documents for transgender people, even if they had not undergone sex reassignment surgery.[31]

Mauricio Macri was elected in 2015 and he came in as a more conservative politician. Besides this, he did not implement any conservative policy. He only cut subsidies to the energy, but did not cut taxes, did not cut federal spending, did not reduce the national deficit and did not try to free the market. Because of his inability to take in serious reforms, he ordered a 50 billion dollar bailout to the IMF in order to restore the economy, which is currently in an economic crisis.[32]

On 10 December 2019, the Centre-Left Alberto Fernández of the Justicialist Party was inaugurated President, after defeating the incumbent Mauricio Macri in the 2019 Argentine general election.[33]

On 14 November 2021, the center-left coalition of Argentina's ruling Peronist party, Frente de Todos (Front for Everyone), lost its majority in Congress, for the first time in almost 40 years, in midterm legislative elections. The election victory of the center-right coalition, Juntos por el Cambio (Together for Change), meant a tough final two years in office for President Alberto Fernandez. Losing control of the Senate made it difficult for him to make key appointments, including to the judiciary. It also forced him to negotiate with the opposition every initiative he sends to the legislature.[34][35]

In April 2023, President Alberto Fernandez announced that he will not seek re-election in the next presidential election.[36] The 19 November 2023 election run-off vote ended in a win for far-right outsider Javier Milei with close to 56% of the vote against 44% of the ruling coalition candidate Sergio Massa.[37] On 10 December 2023, Javier Milei was sworn in as new president of Argentina.[38] At the time of Milei’s inauguration, Argentina’s economy was suffering 143 percent annual inflation, the currency had plunged and four out of 10 Argentines were in poverty.[39]

Abortion edit

In March 2018, a draft for an abortion law was debated in Parliament. The law allowed legal abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy if pregnant women were in danger of physical, psychological or social danger as well as pregnancy caused by rape or invalid fetuses. On 14 June, Parliament accepted the law with a slim majority of 129–123. The debates surrounding the bill caused demonstrations of supporters and opponents. The question of abortion is still contentious in society due to the strong influence of the Catholic Church.[40]

Political pressure groups edit

Some of the most important political-pressure groups in Argentina include: the Argentine Association of Pharmaceutical Labs (CILFA); the Argentine Industrial Union (manufacturers' association); Argentine Rural Society and CARBAP (landowners' associations); the General Confederation of Labor or CGT (Peronist-leaning umbrella labor organization); the Roman Catholic Church; students.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Robinson, James; Acemoglu, Daron (2006). Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 7–8.
  2. ^ a b c d Levitsky, Steven; Murillo, María Victoria (2005). "Introduction". In Levitsky, Steven; Murillo, María Victoria (eds.). Argentine Democracy: The Politics of Institutional Weakness. Penn State University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 0271046341.
  3. ^ García Holgado, Benjamín; Mainwaring, Scott (2023). "Why Democracy Survives Presidential Encroachments: Argentina Since 1983". Comparative Politics. 55 (4): 525–548. doi:10.5129/001041523X16729343375086.
  4. ^ Anderson, Leslie E. (2016). Democratization by Institutions: Argentina's Transition Years in Comparative Perspective. University of Michigan Press. p. 15.
  5. ^ "Argentina: A South American Power Struggles for Stability". Council on Foreign Relations. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  6. ^ "Alberto Fernández asumió la presidencia". Casarosada.gob.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 2019-10-12.
  7. ^ "Dirección Nacional Electoral (DINE)". Argentina.gob.ar (in Spanish). 2 May 2017. Retrieved 2018-10-21.
  8. ^ "Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación Argentina | Gobierno Abierto Judicial". www.csjn.gov.ar. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  9. ^ a b "City Mayors: Local government in Argentina". www.citymayors.com. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Lewis, Daniel (2001). The History of Argentina. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313312567.
  11. ^ "Acta de la Independencia de Argentina: 9 de julio de 1816 • El Sur del Sur". El Sur del Sur (in European Spanish). 2016-06-25. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  12. ^ North, Douglass C. (2012). Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780511808678.
  13. ^ Arthur, W. Brian (March 1989). "Competing Technologies, Increasing Returns, and Lock-In by Historical Events". The Economic Journal. 99 (394): 121. doi:10.2307/2234208. JSTOR 2234208 – via JSTOR.
  14. ^ Spiller, Pablo; Tommasi, Mariano (2007). The Institutional Foundations of Public Policy in Argentina. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511818219.
  15. ^ Levitsky, Steven; Murillo, Mar ́ıa Victoria (2009-06-01). "Variation in Institutional Strength". Annual Review of Political Science. 12 (1): 120. doi:10.1146/annurev.polisci.11.091106.121756.
  16. ^ Htun, Mala (2003). Sex and the State: Abortion, Divorce, and the Family under Latin American Dictatorships and Democracies. Cambridge University Press. pp. 153–154. ISBN 9780511615627.
  17. ^ Alston, Lee J.; Gallo, Andrés A. (April 2010). "Electoral Fraud, the Rise of Peron and Demise of Checks and Balances in Argentina". Explorations in Economic History. 47 (2): 179–197. doi:10.1016/j.eeh.2009.09.002.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Kline, Harvey F.; Wade, Christine J.; Wiarda, Howard J. (2018). Latin American Politics and Development. New York: Westview Press. pp. 103–122. ISBN 978-0-8133-5050-9.
  19. ^ "Sáenz Peña Law | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2018-10-15.
  20. ^ a b . 2013-04-12. Archived from the original on 2013-04-12. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  21. ^ "Electores Preguntas Frecuentes" (PDF). Argentina Gobierno.
  22. ^ "Hay 16.508 cargos electivos en la Argentina". www.nuevamayoria.com. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  23. ^ "Lawmakers Impose Gender Parity in Argentina's Congress, By Surprise | Inter Press Service". www.ipsnews.net. December 2017. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  24. ^ "Sin la oposición y en una sesión polémica, el kirchnerismo convirtió en ley el voto joven en Diputados" (in Spanish). 2012-10-31. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  25. ^ "IFES Election Guide | Country Profile: Argentina". www.electionguide.org. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  26. ^ Clarín.com. "Cristina Kirchner candidata: relanza Unidad Ciudadana y se planta ante los tres PJ" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  27. ^ "Consulta de Escrutinios Definitivos". www.padron.gob.ar. from the original on 23 September 2023. Retrieved 30 October 2023.
  28. ^ "Actas de escrutinio definitivo - GENERALES 2023". Cámara Nacional Electoral. from the original on 23 November 2023. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  29. ^ "Actas de escrutinio definitivo - SEGUNDA VUELTA 2023". Cámara Nacional Electoral. from the original on 5 December 2023. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
  30. ^ "The CFK psychodrama". The Economist. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  31. ^ "Five Years of Presidency, What Should be Remembered of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner?". Retrieved 2018-11-17.
  32. ^ Price Waterhouse & Co. "The Macri Administration: Into the second part of the Presidential Term" (PDF).
  33. ^ Goñi, Uki (2019-10-28). "Argentina election: Macri out as Cristina Fernández de Kirchner returns to office as VP". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  34. ^ "Peronists may lose Argentina Congress for first time in 40 years". www.aljazeera.com.
  35. ^ Bronstein, Hugh; Misculin, Nicolás (15 November 2021). "Argentina's Peronists on the ropes after bruising midterm defeat". Reuters.
  36. ^ "Argentina's President Fernandez will not seek re-election". www.aljazeera.com.
  37. ^ "Javier Milei: Argentina's far-right outsider wins presidential election". BBC News. 2023-11-19. Retrieved 2023-11-24.
  38. ^ "Javier Milei: New president tells Argentina 'shock treatment' looms". 2023-12-11. Retrieved 2023-12-11.
  39. ^ "Argentina's newly sworn-in President Milei warns of shock adjustment to economy". PBS NewsHour. 2023-12-10. Retrieved 2023-12-11.
  40. ^ Fischer Weltalmanach 2019 - Zahlen Daten Fakten. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer. 1 July 2018. p. 43. ISBN 978-3-596-72019-4.
  41. ^ "Argentina Political pressure groups and leaders - Government". www.indexmundi.com. Retrieved 2018-10-19.

External links edit

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook. CIA.
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish) Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina
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This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2016 The politics of Argentina take place in the framework of what the Constitution defines as a federal presidential representative democratic republic where the President of Argentina is both Head of State and Head of Government Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of the Argentine National Congress The Judiciary is independent as are the Executive and the Legislature Elections take place regularly on a multi party system Politics of ArgentinaPolity typeFederal presidential representative republicConstitutionConstitution of ArgentinaLegislative branchNameNational CongressTypeBicameralMeeting placePalace of the Argentine National CongressUpper houseNameSenatePresiding officerVictoria Villarruel Vice President of Argentina amp President of the SenateLower houseNameChamber of DeputiesPresiding officerMartin MenemExecutive branchHead of State and GovernmentTitlePresidentCurrentlyJavier MileiCabinetCurrent cabinetCabinet of Javier MileiHeadquartersCasa RosadaMinistries10Judicial branchNameJudiciary of ArgentinaSupreme CourtChief judgeHoracio Rosatti In the 20th century Argentina experienced significant political turmoil and democratic reversals 1 2 3 Between 1930 and 1976 the armed forces overthrew six governments in Argentina 2 and the country alternated periods of democracy 1912 1930 1946 1955 and 1973 1976 with periods of restricted democracy and military rule 1 Following a transition that began in 1983 4 full scale democracy in Argentina was reestablished 1 2 Argentina s democracy endured through the 2001 02 crisis and to the present day it is regarded as more robust than both its pre 1983 predecessors and other democracies in Latin America 2 Contents 1 National government 1 1 Executive branch 1 2 Legislative branch 1 3 Judiciary branch 2 Provincial and municipal governments 3 History 3 1 Liberal state 3 2 Welfare state 3 3 Neoliberal state 4 Elections and voting 4 1 Elections 4 2 Voting 5 Political parties 5 1 Political parties 5 2 Latest presidential elections 6 Policy 6 1 Abortion 7 Political pressure groups 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksNational government editThe government structure of Argentina is a democracy it contains the three branches of government 5 Executive branch editThe current Chief of State and Head of Government is President Javier Milei 6 nbsp Pink House seats the executive power Legislative branch edit Legislative Branch is a bicameral Congress which consists of the Senate 72 seats presided by the vice president and the Chamber of Deputies 257 seats currently presided by Martin Menem of the La Rioja Province The General Auditing Office of the Nation and the Ombudsman are also part of this branch Deputies serve for 4 years while Senators serve for 6 years 7 nbsp Argentine National Congress seats the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate Judiciary branch editThe Judiciary Branch is composed of federal judges and others with different jurisdictions and a Supreme Court with five judges appointed by the President with approval of the Senate who may be deposed by Congress 8 nbsp Supreme Court of Argentina Provincial and municipal governments editFurther information Government of Argentina Argentina is divided into 23 Provinces the equivalent of States and one autonomous district CABA inside the Buenos Aires province Because of Argentina s federal structure every province has its own constitution and authorities 9 Each province except for Buenos Aires Province is divided into departments departamentos or districts which are in turn divided into municipalities The Buenos Aires Province is different its territory is divided into 134 districts called partidos not municipalities 9 Through Law 27589 decreed in 2020 24 Alternate Federal Capitals are established in Argentina which constitutes the country consolidating with a total of 25 Federal Capitals Among them the main administrative and autonomous Federal Capital which is the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires plus 24 Alternate Federal Capitals one of which represents the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires AMBA and each of the remaining 23 is located in a different province on behalf of the same In the 24 Alternate Federal Capitals the industrial offices of the province are established in representation where the negotiations in question are carried out In addition as part of the conditions established by law the government must move to one of the Alternate Federal Capitals each month citation needed History editArgentina s first government autonomous from the Spanish Crown can be traced back to May 1810 and the May Revolution where an assembly of Argentines called Primera Junta took power 10 Because at the time it was difficult to find the right form of government and even more difficult to consolidate a Republic Argentina experimented with different forms of assembly like juntas and triumvirates 10 The 9th of July 1816 half of Argentina s provinces signed a declaration of independence 11 The beginnings of Argentine state building were rough and many provinces refused to answer to a central government and sign the first constitution of 1826 In 1853 after several years of centralist power a new constitution was passed this one consolidated almost fully the Argentine Nation Buenos Aires still refused to be considered part of the country After the Battle of Pavon in 1861 Buenos Aires set terms for its inclusion in the Constitution and the Republic of Argentina was born with Bartolome Mitre as the President 10 Argentina is an example where institutional instability was established after an initial period of historical contingencies Some random insignificant historical event favors one set of institutions at the beginning Organizations became dependent on the framework of current institutions and made further investments to profit making it undesirably costly to switch to other types of institutions 12 This means that the other potentially better alternative will be unable to catch up later 13 Consequently increasing returns gradually locks the economy or political institutions to an outcome that is not necessarily superior People altered their expectations and stopped investing in the system as the country experienced decades of regime changes after the 1930s seeing both rules and rule making processes being repeatedly overturned 14 Weakly enforced institutions are by design in some cases for domestic support 15 For example anti abortion was a punitive law in Argentina because many people recognize it as morally legitimate The government put no resources into enforcing the rules which allows the middle class to abort pregnancies in private clinics 16 On the other hand strong enforcement might undermine the stability of regimes Between 1930 and 1943 Argentine conservatives maintained power via fraud ridden elections After 1943 electoral rules were followed leading to powerful actors repeatedly modifying the electoral institutions for their benefit 17 Liberal state edit From 1852 until 1930 Argentina experienced liberal government with first oligarchic and then democratic tendencies 18 From 1852 to 1916 the government run by the landowning elite controlled the outcome of elections by committing fraud This was contested by the rising middle class and working class sectors This fueled the creation of more unions and political parties including the Radical Civic Union UCR which represented the emergent middle class 18 In 1912 Law 8871 or the Saenz Pena Law established universal secret and obligatory male suffrage which marked the middle classes entering the government and displacing the landowning elite 19 Welfare state edit Since the 1930s coups d etat have disrupted this democracy After World War II and Juan Peron s presidency recurring economic and institutional crises fostered the rise of military regimes In 1930 the elected president Hipolito Yrigoyen was ousted by a right wing led coup 10 In 1931 the new government held controlled elections and blocked the participation of Yrigoyen s party This alleged elections gave way to the Concordancia a three party regime They controlled the Argentine government through fraud and rigged elections until 1943 10 Several factors including the deaths of the most prominent leaders and World War II led to another coup that ended the Concordancia regime 10 This coup was led by the army which supported the Axis powers and modeled the new government after Italy s fascist regime 18 Among the military leaders was Juan Peron who was in charge of the Secretariat of Labor and Social Welfare He veered off the path set by the conservative army and set forth to improve the living and working conditions of workers including giving Labor Unions support and governmental positions He was jailed briefly but after mass protests he became president in the elections of 1946 His regime is known as a populist one aided by the figure of his second wife Eva Peron or Evita Their regime produced economic growth and improvements on living and working conditions It also passed female suffrage 1947 and nationalized the central bank electricity and gas urban transport railroads and the telephone 18 After the death of his wife Peron started losing support He was ousted in 1955 by another coup Peronism lives on in Argentina The next stage of the Social State was one characterized by both economic and political instability 18 Peron regained power in 1973 but died a year later His third wife Isabel became president She could not run the country and the military took power once again in 1976 18 Neoliberal state edit Jorge Rafael Videla s dictatorship began in 1976 but fell into decline in 1982 after a defeat in the Falklands War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas Guerra del Atlantico Sur 1982 and ended in 1983 with the democratic election of President Raul Alfonsin of the Radical Civic Union party UCR Alfonsin faced significant challenges including a military uprising and resigned in 1989 six months before the end of his term but the country was not in clear danger of becoming subject to a dictatorship again Carlos Menem of the Justicialist Party Peronist served as president for ten years 1989 1999 and made a pact with Alfonsin in order to achieve a 1994 constitutional reform that would allow him to be re elected Following a neoliberal program he ruled until 1999 and then Fernando de la Rua of the Alianza led by the UCR won election This marked the first time in decades that an Argentine president properly finished his term and passed on his charge to another democratically elected president citation needed De la Rua mismanaged the 1998 2002 Argentine great depression and resigned on December 21 2001 amid violent riots Several short lived interim presidents came and went until Congress chose Eduardo Duhalde of the Justicialist Party Peronist to rule until some sort of social and economic peace could be restored Duhalde took care of the most critical matters and called for democratic elections which Nestor Kirchner of the Justicialist Party won in the first use of the ballotage system Kirchner took office on 25 May 2003 In December 2007 he stepped down to allow his wife Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner to win election in his place citation needed Elections and voting editMain article Elections in Argentina Elections edit Elections in Argentina have been regular since the reinstitution of democracy in 1983 Because it is a federal republic Argentina has national provincial municipal and Ciudad de Buenos Aires elections 20 For legislative positions elections are every two years and for the executive power and governors every 4 20 Apart from General elections and ballotage Argentines also vote in P A S O elections Primary open simultaneous and obligatory elections This is an instance before every type of election to decide which candidates will participate in the general elections Political parties need to get at least 1 5 of valid votes to compete in general elections 21 There are 16 508 elected public service positions In the National level President and Vice President 72 senators and 257 deputies In the Provincial level 48 positions for Governor and Deputy Governor 232 senators 944 deputies and 72 other elective positions in the provinces of Tierra del Fuego Cordoba Mendoza and La Pampa Out of the 23 provinces and CABA 15 have unicameral legislatures they do not have senatorial elections and 9 have bicameral legislatures In the Municipal level 1 122 mayors and 8 488 city councils Other authorities add up to 5 271 positions such as the ones in municipal commissions in 10 provinces and members of school commissions and accounts tribunals in 5 provinces 22 In 2017 Argentina passed a bill that imposed gender parity in national elections in order to reach equal participation in Congress The bill stipulates that all the lists of candidates for Congress must alternate between male and female candidates and that half of the list of candidates for national positions have to be made up of women 23 Voting edit In Argentina voting is obligatory for any Argentine either native or naturalized that is 18 years old In November 2012 the government passed a new law that allowed Argentines between the ages of 16 18 to vote optionally 24 In the 2015 national elections voter turnout was particularly high Chamber of Deputies 74 18 Senate 79 83 Presidential 1st Round 78 66 Presidential 2nd Round 80 90 25 Political parties editFor other political parties see List of political parties in Argentina An overview on elections and election results is included in Elections in Argentina Political parties edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2023 Argentina s two largest political parties are the Justicialist Party Partido Justicialista PJ which evolved out of Juan Peron s efforts in the 1940s to expand the role of labor in the political process see Peronism and the Radical Civic Union Union Civica Radical UCR founded in 1891 Traditionally the UCR had more urban middle class support and the PJ more labor support but as of 2011 update both parties are broadly based Most of the numerous political parties that emerged in the past two decades have their origins or even the bulk of their identity tied to them Smaller parties occupy various positions on the political spectrum and a number of them operate only in certain districts In the years after Peron s first years in office several provincial parties emerged often as a vehicle for the continued activities of Peronists whose party was then banned or as coalitions of politicians from all sectors wishing to take forward provincial interests Provincial parties grew in popularity and number after the return of democracy in 1983 and took several of the provincial governor positions Both these parties and the provincial branches of the UCR and PJ have frequently been dominated by modern caudillos and family dynasties such as the Sapags of Neuquen and the Rodriguez Saa s of San Luis This has in turn been a factor in the ongoing factionalism within the two principal parties at national and local levels Historically the organized labor largely tied to the Justicialist Party and the armed forces have also played significant roles in national life Labor s political power was significantly weakened by free market reforms during the 1990s as well as the cooptation of its leaders by the Menem administration They now seem to be returning to their former position since the current government focuses on a productive model with local industry as one of the top priorities The armed forces are firmly under civilian control Repudiated by the public after a period of military rule marked by human rights violations economic decline and military defeat the Argentine military today is a downsized volunteer force focused largely on international peacekeeping While Menem and de la Rua simply reduced their funding Kirchner has effected an ideological cleansing removing a large portion of the top ranks and replacing them with younger leaders with an explicit commitment to preserve human rights and submit to the decisions of the civilian government A grouping of left leaning parties and dissident Peronists the Front for a Country in Solidarity Frente por un Pais Solidario FREPASO emerged in the 1990s as a serious third party coming second in the 1995 Presidential elections In August 1997 the UCR and FREPASO joined in a coalition called Alliance for Work Justice and Education informally Alianza Alliance The Alliance succeeded in taking Fernando de la Rua UCR to the presidency in 1999 with Carlos Chacho Alvarez FrePaSo as vice president Shortly after in October 2000 Alvarez resigned after a scandal related to presidential bribes in the Senate the President s party refused to support or investigate the accusations so the Alliance and even the FrePaSo effectively broke down Moreover in the midst of serious economic crisis and riots President Fernando de la Rua resigned on December 21 2001 leaving the UCR reputation severely damaged The centennial party lost many of its supporters and a bunch of smaller parties emerged from its ashes Two of them scored well in the 2003 presidential election Support for an Egalitarian Republic ARI formed on the initiative of Deputy Elisa Carrio presented itself as a non compromising front against corruption and for progressive ideas ARI somewhat took the center left positions of the defunct Alliance in the ideological spectrum In those elections Carrio came a close fourth in Her influence diminished afterward as the Nestor Kirchner administration running on center left policies succeeded and she took a more conservative stance eventually dividing her party and founding a new alliance the Civic Coalition In June 2007 Fabiana Rios a National Deputy enrolled in ARI was elected Governor of the Province of Tierra del Fuego becoming the first governor belonging to this party The other splinter UCR party called Recrear was led by former De la Rua Minister of Economy Ricardo Lopez Murphy Recrear captured the urban moderate right wing spectrum of voters Lopez Murphy came third in the 2003 presidential elections with a platform that emphasized transparency polarizing with former President Carlos Menem After meagre results for his 2005 senatorial candidacy and ahead of the 2007 elections he joined a group of Province based parties and Macri s Commitment to Change in a new centre right coalition dubbed Republican Proposal Propuesta Republicana PRO On that ticket Macri was elected Chief of government of Buenos Aires Autonomous City Since the 2008 agricultural sector strikes political support for President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and her husband ex president Nestor Kirchner diminished considerably The tax on agricultural exports divided the National Congress as much as the public opinion On 27 July 2008 the tax reform was put down by a votation at the Senate which came to be decided by the vote of Vice President Julio Cobos effectively breaking the governmental coalition Plural Consensus Since then a fraction of dissident peronists allied with conservative PRO Julio Cobos through Federal Consensus ConFe started negotiations with his former party UCR The Radical Civic Union in turn formalized an alliance with the Socialist Party and Elisa Carrio s Civic Coalition styled the Civic and Social Agreement Acuerdo Civico y Social ACyS For the 2009 legislative elections former President Kirchner ran himself as a candidate to National Deputy on top of the Front for Victory Frente para la Victoria FPV party in the Province of Buenos Aires After the defeat of FPV in the 2015 presidential elections Cristina Kirchen decided to form another party called Citizen s Unity She ran as senator of Santa Cruz with this party and won 26 Latest presidential elections edit Summary of the 2023 Argentine general election CandidateRunning matePartyFirst roundSecond roundVotes Votes Sergio MassaAgustin RossiUnion for the Homeland9 853 49236 7811 598 72044 35Javier MileiVictoria VillarruelLa Libertad Avanza8 034 99029 9914 554 56055 65Patricia BullrichLuis PetriJuntos por el Cambio6 379 02323 81Juan SchiarettiFlorencio RandazzoHacemos por Nuestro Pais1 802 0686 73Myriam BregmanNicolas del CanoWorkers Left Front722 0612 70Total26 791 634100 0026 153 280100 00Valid votes26 791 63496 8626 153 28096 79Invalid votes451 4861 63450 7461 67Blank votes415 7371 50417 5741 55Total votes27 658 857100 0027 021 600100 00Registered voters turnout35 854 12277 1435 405 39876 32Source 27 28 29 Policy editPolicy in Argentina after the several military dictatorships has been varied and has aimed at stabilizing the country As stated above Argentina s politics do not lead to a particular side but instead take the country in many directions Since the last military junta gave up its power in 1983 each administration that has been in power has had different priorities President Alfonsin took office in 1983 and his main task was to ensure a peaceful transition In the end he was overcome by an economic crisis that led to a bout of hyperinflation After Alfonsin came President Menem who had to control inflation and stabilize the economy He did so by adopting a series of radical measures including fixed parity between the Argentine peso and the U S dollar He then engaged in a program to move Argentina s economy towards a liberal model This plan included the privatization of the previously state owned telecommunications company oil conglomerate YPF airline Aerolineas Argentinas railroads and utilities As a result large foreign direct investment flowed into Argentina for a short time improving in some isolated cases the infrastructure and quality of service of those companies His policies culminated in the highest unemployment rates of Argentine history and the doubling of external debt In the social arena Menem pardoned military officers serving sentences for human rights abuses of the Dirty War To balance the unpopular decision he also pardoned some of the insurgents convicted of guerrilla attacks in the 1970s The public scandal after the assassination of the soldier Omar Carrasco forced Menem to end compulsory military conscription Menem s administration was regarded by many quantify as corrupt and frivolous Many members of his administrations have been indicted for profiteering while in office Despite the large amount of evidence that Menem had personally profited illegally from his administration he has never been legally convicted The executive had a visible influence on the decisions of the judiciary especially the Supreme Court and displayed a certain contempt for political minorities Moreover it did nothing to reduce political corruption and inefficiency one of the most important and oldest problems in the Argentine government Argentina s Corruption Perceptions Index for 1999 was 3 out of 10 ranking 71st in a survey of 99 countries Transparency International TI 1999 Corruption Perceptions Index Internet Center for Corruption Research Fernando de la Rua s term was notoriously ineffective on many accounts Elected with a popular mandate to reinvigorate the economy and crack down on the corruption of the Menem administration de la Rua was unable or unwilling to perform these tasks He continued on the same economic course of Menem which ultimately led to the 2001 economic crash and de la Rua s resignation The FrePaSo ministers of the administration elected on a wave of hope for social changes also disappointed with a perceived lack of investment in social schemes Eduardo Duhalde s interim term was strongly limited by a highly mobilized society It was marked by the need to pacify the country and soften the impact of the crisis after the forced devaluation of the local currency the peso which had lost three quarters of its value in a matter of months Duhalde employed a mixture of traditional Peronist politics in the form of a monetary subsidy for heads of families and neo Keynesian economic principles to stabilize the economy and bring peace to the streets Nestor Kirchner who belonged to the moderate center left wing of Peronism rooted in the leftist Peronist factions of the 1970s continued Duhalde s measures even keeping his Minister of Economy Roberto Lavagna and added some heterodox economics Heavy taxes on exports have served to keep local prices of valuable commodities in check while collecting huge revenues especially from oil products and agricultural exports like soybeans The restrictive monetary policy of the 1990s has become aggressively expansive the Central Bank has injected large amounts of cash into the economy and bought dollars from the free currency market in order to accumulate reserves The fiscal policy is also expansive the government has raised private and public salaries by decree on several occasions and has encouraged negotiations between the private sector and the labor movements Inflation has again become a concern The government has struck price freezing agreements with certain sectors of the economy producers of milk some foods natural gas etc and put heavy pressure on others Failure to comply on the part of Argentine beef producers has been met with a punitive suspension of exports starting March 2006 intended to increase domestic supply this was then softened to a quota system Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner came after her husband with even more liberal policies She strictly imposed import regulations to encourage local production and exports She started talks with financial officials to pay off Argentina s debt and promised foreign investment In 2012 the move to nationalize YPF an oil firm scared off the foreign investors 30 She launched a conditional cash transfer program as well called Asignacion Universal por Hijo AUH which provided financial incentives to low income or poor citizens for them to send their children to school and get vaccinated During her presidency same sex marriage was legalized and a new law was passed that allowed name and sex change in official documents for transgender people even if they had not undergone sex reassignment surgery 31 Mauricio Macri was elected in 2015 and he came in as a more conservative politician Besides this he did not implement any conservative policy He only cut subsidies to the energy but did not cut taxes did not cut federal spending did not reduce the national deficit and did not try to free the market Because of his inability to take in serious reforms he ordered a 50 billion dollar bailout to the IMF in order to restore the economy which is currently in an economic crisis 32 On 10 December 2019 the Centre Left Alberto Fernandez of the Justicialist Party was inaugurated President after defeating the incumbent Mauricio Macri in the 2019 Argentine general election 33 On 14 November 2021 the center left coalition of Argentina s ruling Peronist party Frente de Todos Front for Everyone lost its majority in Congress for the first time in almost 40 years in midterm legislative elections The election victory of the center right coalition Juntos por el Cambio Together for Change meant a tough final two years in office for President Alberto Fernandez Losing control of the Senate made it difficult for him to make key appointments including to the judiciary It also forced him to negotiate with the opposition every initiative he sends to the legislature 34 35 In April 2023 President Alberto Fernandez announced that he will not seek re election in the next presidential election 36 The 19 November 2023 election run off vote ended in a win for far right outsider Javier Milei with close to 56 of the vote against 44 of the ruling coalition candidate Sergio Massa 37 On 10 December 2023 Javier Milei was sworn in as new president of Argentina 38 At the time of Milei s inauguration Argentina s economy was suffering 143 percent annual inflation the currency had plunged and four out of 10 Argentines were in poverty 39 Abortion edit In March 2018 a draft for an abortion law was debated in Parliament The law allowed legal abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy if pregnant women were in danger of physical psychological or social danger as well as pregnancy caused by rape or invalid fetuses On 14 June Parliament accepted the law with a slim majority of 129 123 The debates surrounding the bill caused demonstrations of supporters and opponents The question of abortion is still contentious in society due to the strong influence of the Catholic Church 40 Political pressure groups editSome of the most important political pressure groups in Argentina include the Argentine Association of Pharmaceutical Labs CILFA the Argentine Industrial Union manufacturers association Argentine Rural Society and CARBAP landowners associations the General Confederation of Labor or CGT Peronist leaning umbrella labor organization the Roman Catholic Church students 41 See also editArgentine general election 2007 History of Argentina Argentine general election 2015References edit a b c Robinson James Acemoglu Daron 2006 Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 7 8 a b c d Levitsky Steven Murillo Maria Victoria 2005 Introduction In Levitsky Steven Murillo Maria Victoria eds Argentine Democracy The Politics of Institutional Weakness Penn State University Press pp 1 2 ISBN 0271046341 Garcia Holgado Benjamin Mainwaring Scott 2023 Why Democracy Survives Presidential Encroachments Argentina Since 1983 Comparative Politics 55 4 525 548 doi 10 5129 001041523X16729343375086 Anderson Leslie E 2016 Democratization by Institutions Argentina s Transition Years in Comparative Perspective University of Michigan Press p 15 Argentina A South American Power Struggles for Stability Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved 2023 03 14 Alberto Fernandez asumio la presidencia Casarosada gob ar in Spanish Retrieved 2019 10 12 Direccion Nacional Electoral DINE Argentina gob ar in Spanish 2 May 2017 Retrieved 2018 10 21 Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nacion Argentina Gobierno Abierto Judicial www csjn gov ar Retrieved 2018 10 01 a b City Mayors Local government in Argentina www citymayors com Retrieved 2018 11 17 a b c d e f Lewis Daniel 2001 The History of Argentina Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 0313312567 Acta de la Independencia de Argentina 9 de julio de 1816 El Sur del Sur El Sur del Sur in European Spanish 2016 06 25 Retrieved 2018 11 17 North Douglass C 2012 Institutions Institutional Change and Economic Performance Cambridge University Press p 7 ISBN 9780511808678 Arthur W Brian March 1989 Competing Technologies Increasing Returns and Lock In by Historical Events The Economic Journal 99 394 121 doi 10 2307 2234208 JSTOR 2234208 via JSTOR Spiller Pablo Tommasi Mariano 2007 The Institutional Foundations of Public Policy in Argentina Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780511818219 Levitsky Steven Murillo Mar ia Victoria 2009 06 01 Variation in Institutional Strength Annual Review of Political Science 12 1 120 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 11 091106 121756 Htun Mala 2003 Sex and the State Abortion Divorce and the Family under Latin American Dictatorships and Democracies Cambridge University Press pp 153 154 ISBN 9780511615627 Alston Lee J Gallo Andres A April 2010 Electoral Fraud the Rise of Peron and Demise of Checks and Balances in Argentina Explorations in Economic History 47 2 179 197 doi 10 1016 j eeh 2009 09 002 a b c d e f Kline Harvey F Wade Christine J Wiarda Howard J 2018 Latin American Politics and Development New York Westview Press pp 103 122 ISBN 978 0 8133 5050 9 Saenz Pena Law Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2018 10 15 a b Constitucion Nacional 2013 04 12 Archived from the original on 2013 04 12 Retrieved 2018 11 17 Electores Preguntas Frecuentes PDF Argentina Gobierno Hay 16 508 cargos electivos en la Argentina www nuevamayoria com Retrieved 2018 11 17 Lawmakers Impose Gender Parity in Argentina s Congress By Surprise Inter Press Service www ipsnews net December 2017 Retrieved 2018 11 17 Sin la oposicion y en una sesion polemica el kirchnerismo convirtio en ley el voto joven en Diputados in Spanish 2012 10 31 Retrieved 2018 11 17 IFES Election Guide Country Profile Argentina www electionguide org Retrieved 2018 11 17 Clarin com Cristina Kirchner candidata relanza Unidad Ciudadana y se planta ante los tres PJ in Spanish Retrieved 2018 11 17 Consulta de Escrutinios Definitivos www padron gob ar Archived from the original on 23 September 2023 Retrieved 30 October 2023 Actas de escrutinio definitivo GENERALES 2023 Camara Nacional Electoral Archived from the original on 23 November 2023 Retrieved 23 November 2023 Actas de escrutinio definitivo SEGUNDA VUELTA 2023 Camara Nacional Electoral Archived from the original on 5 December 2023 Retrieved 1 December 2023 The CFK psychodrama The Economist Retrieved 2018 11 17 Five Years of Presidency What Should be Remembered of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner Retrieved 2018 11 17 Price Waterhouse amp Co The Macri Administration Into the second part of the Presidential Term PDF Goni Uki 2019 10 28 Argentina election Macri out as Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner returns to office as VP The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2020 05 02 Peronists may lose Argentina Congress for first time in 40 years www aljazeera com Bronstein Hugh Misculin Nicolas 15 November 2021 Argentina s Peronists on the ropes after bruising midterm defeat Reuters Argentina s President Fernandez will not seek re election www aljazeera com Javier Milei Argentina s far right outsider wins presidential election BBC News 2023 11 19 Retrieved 2023 11 24 Javier Milei New president tells Argentina shock treatment looms 2023 12 11 Retrieved 2023 12 11 Argentina s newly sworn in President Milei warns of shock adjustment to economy PBS NewsHour 2023 12 10 Retrieved 2023 12 11 Fischer Weltalmanach 2019 Zahlen Daten Fakten Frankfurt am Main Fischer 1 July 2018 p 43 ISBN 978 3 596 72019 4 Argentina Political pressure groups and leaders Government www indexmundi com Retrieved 2018 10 19 External links edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook CIA in Spanish Text of the Constitution in Spanish Argentine National Congress in Spanish Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina in Spanish Presidency of Argentina Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Argentina amp oldid 1216580214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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