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Raúl Alfonsín

Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín (Spanish pronunciation: [raˈul alfonˈsin] ; 12 March 1927 – 31 March 2009) was an Argentine lawyer and statesman who served as President of Argentina from 10 December 1983 to 8 July 1989. He was the first democratically elected president after more than seven years of military dictatorship, and is considered the "father of modern democracy in Argentina".[1] Ideologically, he identified as a radical and a social democrat, serving as the leader of the Radical Civic Union from 1983 to 1991, 1993 to 1995, 1999 to 2001, with his political approach being known as "Alfonsinism".

Raúl Alfonsín
Official portrait, 1984
President of Argentina
In office
10 December 1983 – 8 July 1989
Vice PresidentVíctor Martínez
Preceded byReynaldo Bignone (de facto)
Succeeded byCarlos Menem
National Senator
In office
10 December 2001 – 3 July 2002
ConstituencyBuenos Aires
Member of the Constitutional Convention
In office
1 May 1994 – 22 August 1994
ConstituencyBuenos Aires
National Deputy
In office
25 May 1973 – 24 March 1976
ConstituencyBuenos Aires
In office
12 October 1963 – 28 June 1966
ConstituencyBuenos Aires
Provincial Deputy of Buenos Aires
In office
1 May 1958 – 29 March 1962
Constituency5th electoral section
Councillor of Chascomús
In office
7 May 1954 – 21 September 1955
ConstituencyAt-large
Personal details
Born
Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín

(1927-03-12)12 March 1927
Chascomús, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Died31 March 2009(2009-03-31) (aged 82)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Resting placeLa Recoleta Cemetery
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Political partyRadical Civic Union
Spouse
(m. 1948)
Children6, including Ricardo Alfonsín
ProfessionLawyer
Awards
Other work(s)Leader of the Radical Civic Union (1983–1991, 1993–1995, 1999–2001)
Signature

Born in Chascomús, Buenos Aires Province, Alfonsín began his studies of law at the National University of La Plata and was a graduate of the University of Buenos Aires. He was affiliated with the Radical Civic Union (UCR), joining the faction of Ricardo Balbín after the party split. He was elected a deputy in the legislature of the Buenos Aires province in 1958, during the presidency of Arturo Frondizi, and a national deputy during the presidency of Arturo Umberto Illia. He opposed both sides of the Dirty War, and several times filed a writ of Habeas corpus, requesting the freedom of victims of forced disappearances, during the National Reorganization Process. He denounced the crimes of the military dictatorships of other countries and opposed the actions of both sides in the Falklands War as well. He became the leader of the UCR after Balbín's death and was the Radical candidate for the presidency in the 1983 elections, which he won.

After becoming president, Alfonsín sent a bill to Congress to revoke the self-amnesty law established by the military. He established the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons to investigate the crimes committed by the military, which led to the Trial of the Juntas and resulted in the sentencing of the heads of the former regime. Discontent within the military led to the mutinies of the Carapintadas, leading him to appease them with the full stop law and the law of Due Obedience. He also had conflicts with the unions, which were controlled by the opposing Justicialist Party. He resolved the Beagle conflict, increased trade with Brazil, and proposed the creation of the Contadora support group to mediate between the United States and Nicaragua. He passed the first divorce law of Argentina. He initiated the Austral plan to improve the national economy, but that plan, as well as the Spring plan, failed. The resulting hyperinflation and riots led to his party's defeat in the 1989 presidential elections, which was won by Peronist Carlos Menem.

Alfonsín continued as the leader of the UCR and opposed the presidency of Carlos Menem. He initiated the Pact of Olivos with Menem in order to negotiate the terms for the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution. Fernando de la Rúa led a faction of the UCR that opposed the pact, and eventually became president in 1999. Following de la Rúa's resignation during the December 2001 riots, Alfonsín's faction provided the support needed for the Peronist Eduardo Duhalde to be appointed president by the Congress. He died of lung cancer on 31 March 2009, at the age of 82, and was given a large state funeral.

Early life and career edit

 
The house where Alfonsín lived during his childhood in Chascomús

Raúl Alfonsín was born on 12 March 1927, in the city of Chascomús, 123 km (76 mi) south of Buenos Aires. His parents were Serafín Raúl Alfonsín Ochoa and Ana María Foulkes. His father was of Galician and German descent,[2] and his mother was the daughter of Welsh immigrant Ricardo Foulkes and Falkland Islander María Elena Ford.[3] Following his elementary schooling, Raúl Alfonsín enrolled at the General San Martín Military Lyceum, graduating after five years as a second lieutenant. He did not pursue a military career and began studying law instead. He began his studies at the National University of La Plata, and completed them at the University of Buenos Aires, graduating at the age of 23. He married María Lorenza Barreneche, whom he met in the 1940s at a masquerade ball, in 1949.[4] They moved to Mendoza, La Plata, and returned to Chascomús. They had six sons, of whom only Ricardo Alfonsín would also follow a political career.[5]

Alfonsín bought a local newspaper (El Imparcial). He joined the Radical Civic Union (UCR) in 1946, as a member of the Intransigent Renewal Movement, a faction of the party that opposed the incorporation of the UCR into the Democratic Union coalition. He was appointed president of the party committee in Chascomús in 1951 and was elected to the city council in 1954. He was detained for a brief time, during the reaction of the government of Juan Perón to the bombing of Plaza de Mayo. The Revolución Libertadora ousted Perón from the national government; Alfonsín was again briefly detained and forced to leave his office in the city council. The UCR broke up into two parties: the Intransigent Radical Civic Union (UCRI), led by Arturo Frondizi, and the People's Radical Civic Union (UCRP), led by Ricardo Balbín and Crisólogo Larralde. Alfonsín did not like the split but opted to follow the UCRP.[6]

Alfonsín was elected deputy for the legislature of the Buenos Aires province in 1958, on the UCRP ticket, and was reelected in 1962. He moved to La Plata, the capital of the province, during his tenure. President Frondizi was ousted by a military coup on 29 March 1962, which also closed the provincial legislature. Alfonsín returned to Chascomús. The UCRP prevailed over the UCRI the following year, leading to the presidency of Arturo Umberto Illia. Alfonsín was elected a national deputy, and then vice president of the UCRP bloc in the congress. In 1963 he was appointed president of the party committee for the province of Buenos Aires.[7]

 
Alfonsín during his successful 1963 congressional campaign

Illia was deposed by a new military coup in June 1966, the Argentine Revolution. Alfonsín was detained while trying to hold a political rally in La Plata, and a second time when he tried to re-open the UCRP committee. He was forced to resign as a deputy in November 1966. He was detained a third time in 1968 after a political rally in La Plata. He also wrote opinion articles in newspapers, under the pseudonyms Alfonso Carrido Lura and Serafín Feijó. The Dirty War began during this time, as many guerrilla groups rejected both the right-wing military dictatorship and the civil governments, preferring instead a left-wing dictatorship aligned with the Soviet Union, as in the Cuban Revolution. Alfonsín clarified in his articles that he rejected both the military dictatorship and the guerrillas, asking instead for free elections. The UCRP became the UCR once more, and the UCRI was turned into the Intransigent Party. Alfonsín created the Movement for Renewal and Change within the UCR, to challenge Balbín's leadership of the party. The military dictatorship finally called for free elections, allowing Peronism (which had been banned since 1955) to take part in them. Balbín defeated Alfonsín in the primary elections but lost in the main ones. Alfonsín was elected deputy once more.[8]

Illia was invited in 1975 to a diplomatic mission to the Soviet Union; he declined and proposed Alfonsín instead. Upon his return, Alfonsín became one of the founding members of the Permanent Assembly for Human Rights. He served as the defense lawyer for Mario Roberto Santucho, leader of the ERP guerrillas, but only to carry out due process of law, and not because of a genuine desire to support him.[9] The 1976 Argentine coup d'état against President Isabel Perón started the National Reorganization Process. Alfonsín filed several Habeas corpus motions, requesting the freedom of victims of forced disappearances. He also visited other countries, denouncing those disappearances and violations of human rights. He established the magazine Propuesta y control in 1976, one of the few magazines that criticized the military dictatorship during its early stages. The magazine was published up to 1978. His editorials were collected in 1980 in the book La cuestión argentina. He expressed opposition to the 1982 Falklands War, criticizing the deployment of troops by both sides during the conflict.[9] The Argentine defeat in the war marked the decline of the military dictatorship. The main political parties united in the Multipartidaria, issuing a joint request to the dictatorship to call for elections.[10] Alfonsín proposed the appointment of Arturo Illia as the head of state of a transition government, similar to the Metapolitefsi in Greece. The Movement for Renewal and Change took control of the UCR; Balbín had died the previous year.[11]

Presidential campaign edit

Alfonsín was appointed candidate of the UCR for the 1983 general elections, with Víctor Martínez as the candidate for the vice-presidency. Fernando de la Rúa, who would have run in the primary elections against him, declined his candidacy because of Alfonsín's huge popularity. The publicity was managed by David Ratto, who created the slogan "Ahora Alfonsín" (Spanish: "Now Alfonsín"), and the gesture of shaking hands. His campaign used a non-confrontational approach, in stark contrast with the Peronist candidate for the governorship of the Buenos Aires province, Herminio Iglesias. Iglesias burned a coffin with the seals of the UCR on live television, which generated a political scandal. Both Iglesias and Ítalo Luder, the Peronist candidate for the presidency, saw a decrease in their public image as a result.[12]

During the campaign, both parties made similar proposals to reduce authoritarianism and the political influence of the military, and to maintain the Argentine claim in the Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute.[13] Alfonsín denounced a pact between the military and the Peronist unions that sought an amnesty for the military. He maintained that the armed forces should be subject to the civilian government and that unions should be regulated. He also proposed an investigation into the actions of the military during the Dirty War. He closed his campaign by reading the preamble of the constitution of Argentina.[14] The last rally was at the Plaza de la República, and was attended by 400,000 people.[15]

The elections were held on 30 October. The Alfonsín–Martínez ticket won with 51.7% of the vote, followed by Luder–Bittel with 40.1%. It was the first time since the rise of Perón that the Peronist party was defeated in elections without electoral fraud or proscription. The UCR won 128 seats in the Assembly, forming a majority; and 18 seats in the Senate, constituting a minority. 18 provinces elected radical governors and 17 elected governors from either the Justicialist or local parties. Alfonsín took office on 10 December and gave a speech from the Buenos Aires Cabildo.[16]

Presidency edit

First days edit

 
Raúl Alfonsín's presidential inauguration, 1983

The presidential inauguration of Alfonsín was attended by Isabel Perón. Despite internal recriminations for the defeat, the Peronist party agreed to support Alfonsín as president, to prevent a return of the military. There were still factions in the military ambitious to keep an authoritarian government, and groups such as the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo seeking reparations for the actions of the military during the Dirty War.[17]

Three days after taking office, Alfonsín sent a bill to Congress to revoke the self-amnesty law established by the military. This made it possible for the judiciary to investigate the crimes committed during the Dirty War.[18] During the campaign, Alfonsín had promised that he would do this while Luder had been non-committal.[19] Alfonsín also ordered the initiation of judicial cases against guerrilla leaders Mario Firmenich, Fernando Vaca Narvaja, Ricardo Obregón Cano, Rodolfo Galimberti, Roberto Perdía, Héctor Pardo and Enrique Gorriarán Merlo; and military leaders Jorge Videla, Emilio Massera, Orlando Agosti, Roberto Viola, Armando Lambruschini, Omar Graffigna, Leopoldo Galtieri, Jorge Anaya and Basilio Lami Dozo.[18] He also requested the extradition of guerrilla leaders who were living abroad.[20]

Most of the first cabinet, organized in Chascomús, was composed of trusted colleagues of Alfonsín. Alfonsín appointed as minister of labor Antonio Mucci, who belonged to a faction of the UCR that sought to reduce the influence of Peronism among labor unions, and promptly sent a bill to Congress designed to promote independent unions.[21] Facing an economic crisis, he appointed Bernardo Grinspun as minister of the economy.[22] He appointed Aldo Neri minister of health, Dante Caputo minister of foreign relations, Antonio Tróccoli minister of interior affairs, Roque Carranza minister of public works, Carlos Alconada Aramburu minister of education, and Raúl Borrás minister of defense. Juan Carlos Pugliese led the chamber of deputies, and Edison Otero was the provisional president of the senate. Many presidential negotiations took place at the Quinta de Olivos, the official residence of the president, rather than at the Casa Rosada.[23]

Aftermath of the Dirty War edit

 
Cover of the "Nunca más" ("Never again") report by the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons

The first priority of Raúl Alfonsín was to consolidate democracy, incorporate the armed forces into their standard role in a civilian government, and prevent further military coups.[24] Alfonsín first tried to reduce the political power of the military with budget cuts, reductions of military personnel and changing their political tasks.[25] As for the crimes committed during the Dirty War, Alfonsín was willing to respect the command responsibility and accept the "superior orders" defense for the military of lower ranks, as long as the Junta leaders were sentenced under military justice. This project was resisted by human rights organizations such as Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and public opinion,[26] as it was expected that the defendants would be acquitted or receive low sentences.[20] The military considered that the Dirty War was a legally sanctioned war, and considered the prosecutions to be unjustified.[20] Alfonsín also established the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP), composed of several well-known personalities, to document cases of forced disappearances, human rights violations and abduction of children.[18] Alfonsín sent a military code bill to Congress so that the military would use it. In its "Nunca más" report (Spanish: Never again), the CONADEP revealed the wide scope of the crimes committed during the Dirty War, and how the Supreme Council of the military had supported the military's actions against the guerrillas.[27]

As a result, Alfonsín sponsored the Trial of the Juntas, in which, for the first time, the leaders of a military coup in Argentina were on trial.[28] The first hearings began at the Supreme Court in April 1985 and lasted for the remainder of the year. In December, the tribunal handed down life sentences for Jorge Videla and former Navy Chief Emilio Massera, as well as 17-year sentences for Roberto Eduardo Viola. President Leopoldo Galtieri was acquitted of charges related to the repression, but he was court-martialed in May 1986 for malfeasance during the Falklands War.[29] Ramón Camps received a 25-year sentence. The trials did not focus only on the military: Mario Firmenich was captured in Brazil in 1984 and extradited to Argentina. José López Rega was extradited from Miami in 1986, because of his links with the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance.[30]

The military was supported by the families of the victims of subversion, a group created to counter the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. This group placed the blame for the Dirty War on the guerrillas but had few followers.[31] The trials were followed by bomb attacks and rumors of military protests and even a possible coup. Alfonsín sought to appease the military by raising their budget. As that was not enough, he proposed the full stop law, to set a deadline for Dirty War-related prosecutions. The Congress approved the law, despite strong opposition from the public. Prosecutors rushed to start cases before the deadline, filing 487 charges against 300 officers, with 100 of them still in active service. Major Ernesto Barreiro refused to appear in court and started a mutiny in Córdoba. Lieutenant Colonel Aldo Rico started another mutiny at Campo de Mayo, supporting Barreiro. The rebels were called "Carapintadas" (Spanish: "Painted faces") because of their use of military camouflage. The CGT called a general strike in support of Alfonsín, and large masses rallied in the Plaza de Mayo to support the government. Alfonsín negotiated directly with the rebels and secured their surrender. He announced the end of the crisis from the balcony of the Casa Rosada.[32] The mutineers eventually surrendered, but the government proceeded with the Law of Due Obedience to regulate the trials. However, the timing of both events was exploited by the military, and the opposition parties described the outcome as a surrender by Alfonsín.[33]

Aldo Rico escaped from prison in January 1988 and started a new mutiny in a distant regiment in the northeast. This time, both the military support for the mutiny and the public outcry against it were minimal. The army attacked him, and Rico surrendered after a brief combat. Colonel Mohamed Alí Seineldín launched a new mutiny in late 1988. As in 1987, the mutineers were defeated and jailed, but the military was reluctant to open fire against them. Alfonsín's goal of reconciling the military with the civil population failed, as the latter rejected the military's complaints, and the military was focused on internal issues. The Movimiento Todos por la Patria, a small guerrilla army led by Enrique Gorriarán Merlo, staged the attack on the Regiment of La Tablada in 1989. The army killed many of its members and quickly defeated the uprising.[34]

Relation with trade unions edit

 
Unioninst Saúl Ubaldini led several strikes against Alfonsín

During his tenure, Alfonsin clashed with labor unions in Argentina over economic reforms and trade liberalization policies.[35] Peronism still controlled the labor unions, the most powerful ones in all of Latin America.[13] The biggest one was the General Confederation of Labour (CGT). Alfonsín sought to reduce the Peronist influence over the unions, fearing that they may become a destabilizing force for the fledgling democracy.[36] He rejected their custom of holding single-candidate internal elections, and deemed them totalitarian and not genuine representatives of the workforce. His proposal was to change the laws for those internal elections, remove the union leaders appointed during the dictatorship, and elect new ones under the new laws.[37] The CGT rejected the proposal as interventionist, and prompted Peronist politicians to vote against it.[38] The law was approved by the Chamber of Deputies but failed to pass in the Senate by one vote.[39] A second bill proposed simply a call to elections, without supervision from the government, which was approved. As a result, the unions remained Peronist.[40]

The CGT was splintered into internal factions at the time. Lorenzo Miguel had close ties to the Justicialist party, and led "the 62 organizations" faction. Saúl Ubaldini was more confrontational, distrusted the politicians of the PJ, and was eventually appointed secretary general of the CGT.[39] His lack of political ties allowed him to work as a mediator between the union factions. Carlos Alderete led a faction closer to Alfonsín, named "the 15" unions. The government sought to deepen the internal divisions between the unions by appointing Alderete as minister of labor and promoting legislation to benefit his faction. He was removed after the defeat in the 1987 midterm elections, but the government stayed on good terms with his faction.[41]

Alfonsín kept a regulation from the dictatorship that allowed him to regulate the level of wages. He authorized wage increases every three months, to keep them up to the inflation rate. The CGT rejected this, and proposed instead that wages be determined by free negotiations.[42] Alfonsín allowed strike actions, which were forbidden during the dictatorship, which gave the unions another way to expand their influence.[43] There were thirteen general strikes and thousands of minor labor conflicts. However, unlike similar situations in the past, the CGT sided with Alfonsín during the military rebellions, and did not support the removal of a non-Peronist president.[38][44] The conflicts were caused by high inflation, and the unions requested higher wages in response to it. The unions got the support of the non-unionized retirees, the church and left-wing factions. Popular support for the government allowed it to endure in spite of opposition from the unions.[45]

Social policies edit

With the end of the military dictatorship, Alfonsín pursued cultural and educational policies aimed at reducing the authoritarian customs of several institutions and groups. He also promoted freedom of the press. Several intellectuals and scientists who had left the country in the previous decade returned, which benefited the universities. The University of Buenos Aires returned to the quality levels that it had in the 1960s. Many intellectuals became involved in politics as well, providing a cultural perspective to the political discourse. Both Alfonsín and the Peronist Antonio Cafiero benefited.[46]

Divorce was legalized by a law passed in 1987. The church opposed it, but it had huge popular support that included even Catholic factions, who reasoned that marital separation already existed, and divorce simply made it explicit. The church opposed Alfonsín after that point. The church successfully exerted pressure to prevent the abolition of religious education. In line with the teachings of Pope John Paul II, the Church criticized what it perceived as an increase in drugs, terrorism, abortion, and pornography.[47]

Foreign policy edit

 
Alfonsín meets with U.S President Ronald Reagan.

Argentina had a tense relationship with the United Kingdom due to the recently concluded Falklands War. The British government had temporarily prohibited all foreign ships from entering the exclusion zone of the islands in 1986. Argentina organized air and marine patrols, as well as military maneuvers in Patagonia. However, this was not enough to placate the military hard-liners in Argentina.[30] Alfonsín proposed the postponement of the sovereignty discussions, instead negotiating for a de jure cease of hostilities, with a reduction in the number of military forces and normalization of Argentina–United Kingdom relations. The United Kingdom did not trust the proposal, suspecting that it was a cover-up for sovereignty discussions.[48]

The Beagle conflict was still an unresolved problem with Chile, despite the 1978 Papal mediation. The military, troubled by the trial of the juntas, called for rejection of the proposed agreement and a continuation of the country's claim over the islands. Alfonsín called for a referendum to settle the dispute. Despite opposition from the military and the Justicialist party, who called for abstention, support for the resolution referendum reached 82%.[49] The bill passed in the Senate by a single vote majority, as the PJ maintained its resistance. The Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1984 between Chile and Argentina was signed the following year, ending the conflict. The human rights violations committed by the Chilean president Augusto Pinochet remained a contentious issue, as well as the revelation of Chilean assistance to British forces during the Falklands War.[50] The Argentine church invited Pope John Paul II for a second visit to Argentina in 1987, to celebrate his successful mediation. He celebrated World Youth Day next to the Obelisk of Buenos Aires, and gave a mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Luján.[51]

Argentina allied with Brazil, Uruguay and Peru, three countries that had also recently ended their local military dictatorships, to mediate in the conflict between the United States and Nicaragua.[52] They created the Contadora support group, to support the Contadora group from South America. Both groups negotiated together but ultimately failed because of the reluctance of both Nicaragua and the United States to change their positions. The group changed its scope later to discuss foreign debt and diplomacy with the United Kingdom in relation to the Falklands conflict.[53]

Initially, Alfonsín refused to foster diplomatic relations with the Brazilian military government, and only did so when the dictatorship ended and José Sarney became president. One of their initial concerns was to increase Argentine–Brazilian trade. Both presidents met in Foz do Iguaçu and issued a joint declaration about the peaceful use of nuclear power. A second meeting in Buenos Aires strengthened the trade agreements. Argentina and Brazil signed the Program of Integration and Economic Cooperation (PICE),[54] and in 1988 both countries and Uruguay agreed to create a common market. This led to the 1991 Treaty of Asunción, that created the Mercosur.[55]

Alfonsín was the first Argentine head of state to give an official visit to the USSR.

Economic policy edit

 
Inflation rates in 1989 and 1990

Alfonsín began his term with many economic problems. In the previous decade, the national economy had contracted by 15%.[56] The foreign debt was nearly 43  billion dollars by the end of the year, and the country had narrowly prevented a sovereign default in 1982. During that year, the gross domestic product fell by 5.6%, and the manufacturing profits by 55%. Unemployment was at nearly 10%, and inflation was nearly 209%. It also appeared unlikely that the country would receive the needed foreign investment.[57] The country had a deficit of $6.7 billion. Possible solutions such as a devaluation of the currency, privatization of industry, or restrictions on imports, would probably have proven to be unpopular.[22]

Initially, the government did not take any strong action to tackle the economic problems.[56] Bernardo Grinspun, the first minister of the economy, arranged an increase in wages, reaching the levels of 1975. This caused inflation to reach 32%. He also tried to negotiate more favorable terms on the country's foreign debt, but the negotiations failed. Risking a default, he negotiated with the IMF, which requested spending cuts. International credits prevented default at the end of 1984, but he resigned in March 1985 when the debt reached $1  billion and the IMF denied further credits. Grinspun was succeeded by Juan Vital Sourrouille, who designed the Austral plan in 1985. This plan froze prices and wages, stopped the printing of money, arranged spending cuts, and established a new currency, the Austral, worth 1 United States dollar. The plan was a success in the short term and choked inflation.[58] However, most of the initial popularity of Alfonsín had declined by this point, and could not persuade many of the benefits of austerity for the long-term improvement of the economy.[56] Inflation rose again by the end of the year, the CGT opposed the wage freeze, and the business community opposed the price freeze. Alfonsín thought that the privatization of some state assets and deregulation of the economy might work, but those proposals were opposed by both the PJ and his own party.[59] The Austral plan was also undermined by populist economic policies held by the government.[56]

With the support of the World Bank, the government tried new measures in 1987, including an increase in taxes, privatizations, and a decrease in government spending. Those measures could not be enforced; the government had lost the 1987 midterm elections, "the 15" unions that had earlier supported the government distanced themselves from it, and the business community was unable to suggest a clear course of action. The PJ, aiming for a victory in the 1989 presidential elections, opposed the measures that it believed would have a negative social impact.[60] The "Spring plan" sought to keep the economy stable until the elections by freezing prices and wages and reducing the federal deficit. This plan had an even worse reception than the Austral plan, and none of the parties supported it. The World Bank and the IMF refused to extend credits to Argentina. Big exporters refused to sell dollars to the Central Bank, which depleted its reserves.[61] The austral was devaluated in February 1989, and the high inflation turned into hyperinflation. The US Dollar was worth 14 Australes by the beginning of 1989, and 17000 by May.[56] The 1989 presidential elections took place during this crisis, and the Justicialist Carlos Menem became the new president.[62]

Midterm elections edit

 
Alfonsín visiting an exhibition in 1986

The actions taken against the military contributed to a strong showing by the UCR in the November 1985 legislative elections. They gained one seat in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house of Congress, which meant control of 130 of the 254 seats. The Justicialists lost eight seats (leaving 103) and smaller, provincial parties made up the difference. Alfonsín surprised observers in April 1986 by announcing the creation of a panel entrusted to plan a transfer of the nation's capital to Viedma, a small coastal city 800 km (500 mi) south of Buenos Aires. This proposal was never implemented, as it was too expensive because Viedma lacked the required urban infrastructure.[63] His proposals boldly called for constitutional amendments creating a Parliamentary system, including a prime minister, and were well received by the Chamber of Deputies, though they encountered strong opposition in the Senate.[64]

The government suffered a big setback in the 1987 legislative election. The UCR lost the majority in the chamber of deputies. All provinces elected Peronist governors, with the exception of Córdoba and Río Negro. Along with the city of Buenos Aires (a federal district at the time), they were the only districts where the UCR prevailed. As a result, the government could not move forward with its legislative agenda, and the PJ only supported minor projects. The PJ was strengthened for the 1989 presidential elections, and the UCR sought to propose governor Eduardo Angeloz as a candidate. Angeloz was a rival of Alfonsín within the party.[65]

Later years edit

 
Last public appearance of Alfonsín (center) with President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (right) and First Gentleman Néstor Kirchner (left), 2008.

Amid rampant inflation, Angeloz was heavily defeated by PJ candidate Carlos Menem in the 1989 election. By the winter of 1989, the inflation had grown so severe that Alfonsín transferred power to Menem on 8 July, five months earlier than scheduled.

Alfonsín stayed on as president of the UCR, leaving after the party's defeat in the 1991 legislative elections. Suffering damage to its image because of the hyperinflation of 1989, the UCR lost in several districts. Alfonsín became president of the party again in 1993. He supported the creation of a special budget for the province of Buenos Aires, led by governor Eduardo Duhalde. The radical legislator Leopoldo Moreau supported the new budget even more vehemently than the Peronists. Both parties had an informal alliance in the province. Alfonsín also supported the amendment to the constitution of Buenos Aires that allowed Duhalde to run for re-election.[66]

President Carlos Menem sought a constitutional amendment to allow his re-election, and Alfonsín opposed it. The victory in the 1993 midterm elections strengthened the PJ, which approved the bill in the Senate. Menem proposed a referendum on the amendment, to force the radical deputies to support it. He also proposed a bill for a law that would allow a constitutional amendment with a simple majority of the Congress.[67] As a result, Alfonsín made the Pact of Olivos with him. With this agreement, the UCR would support Menem's proposal, but with further amendments that would reduce presidential power. The Council of Magistracy of the Nation reduced the influence of the executive power over the judiciary, the city of Buenos Aires would become an autonomous territory allowed to elect its own mayor, and the presidential term of office would be reduced to four years. The presidential elections would include the two-round system, and the electoral college would be abolished. Alfonsín was elected to the constituent assembly that worked for the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution. A faction of the UCR, led by Fernando de la Rúa, opposed the pact, but the party as a whole supported Alfonsín.[68] The UCR got only 19% of the vote in the elections, attaining a third position in the 1995 presidential elections behind the Frepaso when Menem was re-elected. Alfonsín resigned the presidency of the party in that year.[69]

The UCR and the Frepaso united as a political coalition, the Alliance for Work, Justice and Education, led by Alfonsín, Fernando de la Rúa, and Rodolfo Terragno from the UCR, and Carlos Álvarez and Graciela Fernández Meijide from the Frepaso. The coalition won the 1997 legislative elections.[70] Alfonsín did not agree with de la Rúa about the fixed exchange rate used by then. He thought that it had been a good measure in the past but had become detrimental to the Argentine economy, while de la Rúa supported it.[71]

Alfonsín suffered a car crash in the Río Negro province in 1999, during the campaign for governor Pablo Verani. They were on Route 6, and he was ejected from the car because he was not wearing a seat belt. He was hospitalized for 39 days. De la Rúa became president in the 1999 elections, defeating the governor of Buenos Aires, Eduardo Duhalde. Alfonsín was elected Senator for Buenos Aires Province in October 2001. De la Rúa resigned during the December 2001 riots, and the Congress appointed Adolfo Rodríguez Saá, who resigned as well. Alfonsín instructed the Radical legislators to support Duhalde as the new president. He also gave him two ministers, Horacio Jaunarena for Defense and Jorge Vanossi for Justice. The radical support helped Duhalde overcome the ambitions of Carlos Ruckauf and José Manuel de la Sota, who also had ambitions to be appointed president.[72] Alfonsín's health problems later in the year led him to step down, to be replaced by Diana Conti.[73]

In 2006, Alfonsín supported a faction of the UCR that favored the idea of carrying an independent candidate for the 2007 presidential elections. The UCR, instead of fielding its own candidate, endorsed Roberto Lavagna, a center-left economist who presided over the dramatic recovery in the Argentine economy from 2002 until he parted ways with President Néstor Kirchner in December 2005. Unable to sway enough disaffected Kirchner supporters, Lavagna garnered third place.[74] Alfonsín was honored by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner with a bust of his likeness at the Casa Rosada on 1 October 2008. This was his last public appearance.[75]

Death edit

 
Alfonsín's memorial service at the Argentine National Congress

Alfonsín died at home on 31 March 2009, at the age of 82, after being diagnosed a year before with lung cancer. The streets around his house at the Santa Fe avenue were filled with hundreds of people, who started a candlelight vigil. The radical Julio Cobos, Fernández de Kirchner's vice president, was the acting president at the moment and ordered three days of national mourning. There was a ceremony in the Congress, where his body was displayed in the Blue Hall, that was attended by almost a thousand people.[76] His widow María Lorenza Barreneche could not attend the funeral, because of her own poor health.[77] It was attended by former presidents Carlos Menem, Fernando de la Rúa, Eduardo Duhalde and Néstor Kirchner, all the members of the Supreme Court of Argentina, mayor Mauricio Macri, governor Daniel Scioli, the president of Uruguay Tabaré Vázquez and several other politicians. The coffin was moved to La Recoleta Cemetery. He was placed next to the graves of other important historical figures of the UCR, such as Leandro N. Alem, Hipólito Yrigoyen and Arturo Illia.[78]

At the international level, Perú set a day of national mourning, and Paraguay set three days. The governments of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, France, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Spain, Uruguay, and the United States sent messages of condolence.[79] In addition to Tabaré Vázquez, Julio María Sanguinetti of Uruguay, and Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil attended the ceremony.[78]

Legacy edit

 
President Mauricio Macri opens an exhibition about Raúl Alfonsín

Historians Félix Luna, Miguel Angel de Marco, and Fernando Rocchi all praise the role of Raúl Alfonsín in the aftermath of the Dirty War and the restoration of democracy. Luna also considers that Alfonsín was an effective president and that he set an example of not using the state for personal profit. De Marco points out that it was a delicate time period, and any mistake could have endangered the newly founded democracy and led to another coup.[80] The aforementioned historians do not agree, though, on their view of the Pact of Olivos. Luna considers that it was a necessary evil to prevent the chaos that would have been generated if Menem managed to proceed with the constitutional amendment without negotiating with the UCR. De Marco and Rocchi instead believe that it was the biggest mistake of Alfonsín's political career.[80]

Alfonsín received the 1985 Princess of Asturias Award for international cooperation because of both his role in ending the Beagle dispute and his work to reestablish democracy in Argentina. He was named "Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires Province" in 2008, and "Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires" in 2009. The latter award was granted posthumously and received by his son Ricardo Alfonsín, ambassador to Spain.[81]

Publications edit

  • La cuestión argentina. Propuesta Argentina. 1981. ISBN 9505490488.[82]
  • Qué es el radicalismo. Círculo de lectores. 1983. ISBN 9500701812.[82]
  • Ahora: mi propuesta política. Sudamericana. 1983. ISBN 9503700086.[82]
  • Inédito: una batalla contra la dictadura. Legasa. 1986. ISBN 9506000883.[82]
  • El poder de la democracia. Fundación Plural. 1987. ISBN 9509910902.[82]
  • Política social y democracia: la experiencia del cono sur. Intercontinental. 1993. ISBN 987917318X.[82]
  • Democracia y consenso. Consejo Económico y Social. 1996. ISBN 9500509148.[82]
  • Memoria política: transición a la democracia y derechos humanos. Fondo de Cultura Económica. 2004. ISBN 950557617X.[82]
  • Fundamentos de la república democrática: curso de teoría del estado. Eudeba. 2006. ISBN 9502315626.[82]

References edit

  1. ^ Infobae (2013). "Diez anécdotas de Alfonsín, el padre de la democracia moderna en Argentina" (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 October 2013.
  2. ^ Lagleyze, p. 8
  3. ^ Quirós, Carlos Alberto (1986). Guía Radical. Galerna. p. 13. ISBN 9789505561858.
  4. ^ "Murió María Lorenza Barrenechea, la esposa de Raúl Alfonsín". Clarín (Argentine newspaper). 6 January 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  5. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 9–10
  6. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 10–13
  7. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 13–14
  8. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 14–19
  9. ^ a b Rock, p. 387
  10. ^ Rock, p. 384
  11. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 20–23
  12. ^ Lagleyze, p. 23
  13. ^ a b Rock, p. 388
  14. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 23–26
  15. ^ Rock, 389
  16. ^ Lagleyze, p. 26
  17. ^ Rock, p. 390
  18. ^ a b c Tedesco, p. 66
  19. ^ Méndez, pp. 12–13
  20. ^ a b c Lewis, p. 152
  21. ^ Tedesco, pp. 73–74
  22. ^ a b Lewis, p. 148
  23. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 32–33
  24. ^ Tedesco, p. 62
  25. ^ Tedesco, p. 64
  26. ^ Tedesco, p. 65
  27. ^ Tedesco, pp. 67–68
  28. ^ Tedesco, p. 68
  29. ^ Rock, p. 395
  30. ^ a b Rock, p. 401
  31. ^ Lewis, p. 154
  32. ^ Lewis, pp. 154–155
  33. ^ Romero, p. 251
  34. ^ Romero, pp. 264–265
  35. ^ Dean, Adam (2022), "Opening Argentina: Menem's Repression of the CGT", Opening Up by Cracking Down: Labor Repression and Trade Liberalization in Democratic Developing Countries, Cambridge University Press, pp. 113–147, doi:10.1017/9781108777964.007, ISBN 978-1-108-47851-9
  36. ^ Tedesco, pp. 62–63
  37. ^ Tedesco, pp. 71–72
  38. ^ a b Tedesco, p. 73
  39. ^ a b Lewis, p. 156
  40. ^ Rock, p. 397
  41. ^ Romero, p. 253
  42. ^ Tedesco, p. 72
  43. ^ Rock, 391
  44. ^ Lewis, p. 155
  45. ^ Romero, pp. 252–253
  46. ^ Romero, pp. 245–246
  47. ^ Romero, pp. 246–247
  48. ^ Carlos Escudé and Andrés Cisneros (2000). "Enero de 1984-julio de 1989" [January 1984 – July 1989] (in Spanish). CARI. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  49. ^ Lewis, pp. 153–154
  50. ^ Carlos Escudé and Andrés Cisneros (2000). "Las relaciones con los países latinoamericanos" [Relation with Latin American countries] (in Spanish). CARI. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  51. ^ [The visits of John Paul II to Argentina] (in Spanish). La Nación. 1 April 2005. Archived from the original on 7 January 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  52. ^ Romero, p. 247
  53. ^ Carlos Escudé and Andrés Cisneros (2000). "El Grupo de Contadora y el Grupo de Apoyo a Contadora: el Grupo de los Ocho" [The Contadora group and the Contadora support group: the group of the eight] (in Spanish). CARI. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  54. ^ Carlos Escudé and Andrés Cisneros (2000). "Las relaciones con Brasil" [The relations with Brazil] (in Spanish). CARI. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  55. ^ Carlos Escudé and Andrés Cisneros (2000). "Las relaciones con Uruguay" [The relations with Uruguay] (in Spanish). CARI. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  56. ^ a b c d e Hedges, p. 245
  57. ^ Rock, p. 391
  58. ^ Rock, p. 398
  59. ^ Romero, pp. 257–258
  60. ^ Romero, pp. 258–259
  61. ^ McGuire, p. 215
  62. ^ Romero, pp. 267–268
  63. ^ Hedges, p. 246
  64. ^ Romero, p. 276
  65. ^ Romero, p. 264
  66. ^ Reato, pp. 58–59
  67. ^ Romero, pp. 285–286
  68. ^ Reato, p. 73
  69. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 26–27
  70. ^ Lagleyze, p. 27
  71. ^ Reato, p. 59
  72. ^ Reato, pp. 61–62
  73. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 27–29
  74. ^ "Cristina Kirchner, presidenta" [Cristina Kirchner, president] (in Spanish). La Nación. 29 October 2007. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  75. ^ Clifford Kraus (31 March 2009). "Raúl Alfonsín, 82, Former Argentine Leader, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  76. ^ [A populated homage in the streets]. La Nación (in Spanish). 1 April 2009. Archived from the original on 26 November 2018. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  77. ^ "Murió María Lorenza Barrenechea, la esposa de Raúl Alfonsín". Clarín (Argentine newspaper). 6 January 2016. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  78. ^ a b Lagleyze, p. 29
  79. ^ "Líderes mundiales envían sus condolencias" [Global leaders send their condolences]. La Nación (in Spanish). 1 April 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  80. ^ a b Constanza Longarte (2 April 2009). "Historiadores destacan el papel de Alfonsín como restaurador de la democracia" [Historians praise the role of Alfonsín in the recovery of democracy] (in Spanish). La Nación. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  81. ^ Lagleyze, pp. 47–49
  82. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Libros escritos por Alfonsín" [Books written by Alfonsín] (in Spanish). Alfonsin.org. Retrieved 19 December 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Hedges, Jill (2011). Argentina: A modern history. United States: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84885-654-7.
  • Lagleyze, Julio Luqui (2010). Grandes biografías de los 200 años: Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín. Argentina: Clarín. ISBN 978-987-07-0836-0.
  • Lewis, Daniel (2015). The History of Argentina. United States: ABC Clio. ISBN 978-1-61069-860-3.
  • McGuire, James (1997). Peronism without Perón. United States: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804736558.
  • Méndez, Juan (1987). Truth and Partial Justice in Argentina. United States: Americas Watch Report. ISBN 9780938579342.
  • Romero, Luis Alberto (2013) [1994]. A History of Argentina in the Twentieth Century. United States: The Pennsylvania University Press. ISBN 978-0-271-06228-0.
  • Rock, David (1987). Argentina, 1516–1987: From Spanish Colonization to Alfonsín. United States: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-06178-0. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  • Tedesco, Laura (1999). Democracy in Argentina: Hope and Disillusion. United States: Frank Cass Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7146-4978-8.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Raúl Alfonsín at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article: Raúl Alfonsín
  •   Spanish Wikiquote has quotations related to: Raúl Alfonsín
  • Official site (in Spanish)
  • Biography by CIDOB Foundation (in Spanish)
  • Discurso del presidente Raúl Alfonsín (in Spanish)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by President of Argentina
1983–1989
Succeeded by

raúl, alfonsín, other, people, named, alfonsín, alfonsín, disambiguation, raúl, ricardo, alfonsín, spanish, pronunciation, raˈul, alfonˈsin, march, 1927, march, 2009, argentine, lawyer, statesman, served, president, argentina, from, december, 1983, july, 1989,. For other people named Alfonsin see Alfonsin disambiguation Raul Ricardo Alfonsin Spanish pronunciation raˈul alfonˈsin 12 March 1927 31 March 2009 was an Argentine lawyer and statesman who served as President of Argentina from 10 December 1983 to 8 July 1989 He was the first democratically elected president after more than seven years of military dictatorship and is considered the father of modern democracy in Argentina 1 Ideologically he identified as a radical and a social democrat serving as the leader of the Radical Civic Union from 1983 to 1991 1993 to 1995 1999 to 2001 with his political approach being known as Alfonsinism Raul AlfonsinOfficial portrait 1984President of ArgentinaIn office 10 December 1983 8 July 1989Vice PresidentVictor MartinezPreceded byReynaldo Bignone de facto Succeeded byCarlos MenemNational SenatorIn office 10 December 2001 3 July 2002ConstituencyBuenos AiresMember of the Constitutional ConventionIn office 1 May 1994 22 August 1994ConstituencyBuenos AiresNational DeputyIn office 25 May 1973 24 March 1976ConstituencyBuenos AiresIn office 12 October 1963 28 June 1966ConstituencyBuenos AiresProvincial Deputy of Buenos AiresIn office 1 May 1958 29 March 1962Constituency5th electoral sectionCouncillor of ChascomusIn office 7 May 1954 21 September 1955ConstituencyAt largePersonal detailsBornRaul Ricardo Alfonsin 1927 03 12 12 March 1927Chascomus Buenos Aires Province ArgentinaDied31 March 2009 2009 03 31 aged 82 Buenos Aires ArgentinaResting placeLa Recoleta CemeteryBuenos Aires ArgentinaPolitical partyRadical Civic UnionSpouseMaria Lorenza Barreneche m 1948 wbr Children6 including Ricardo AlfonsinProfessionLawyerAwardsPrincess of Asturias AwardsIllustrious Citizen of Buenos AiresOther work s Leader of the Radical Civic Union 1983 1991 1993 1995 1999 2001 SignatureRaul Alfonsin s voice source source Recorded c 1983 89Born in Chascomus Buenos Aires Province Alfonsin began his studies of law at the National University of La Plata and was a graduate of the University of Buenos Aires He was affiliated with the Radical Civic Union UCR joining the faction of Ricardo Balbin after the party split He was elected a deputy in the legislature of the Buenos Aires province in 1958 during the presidency of Arturo Frondizi and a national deputy during the presidency of Arturo Umberto Illia He opposed both sides of the Dirty War and several times filed a writ of Habeas corpus requesting the freedom of victims of forced disappearances during the National Reorganization Process He denounced the crimes of the military dictatorships of other countries and opposed the actions of both sides in the Falklands War as well He became the leader of the UCR after Balbin s death and was the Radical candidate for the presidency in the 1983 elections which he won After becoming president Alfonsin sent a bill to Congress to revoke the self amnesty law established by the military He established the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons to investigate the crimes committed by the military which led to the Trial of the Juntas and resulted in the sentencing of the heads of the former regime Discontent within the military led to the mutinies of the Carapintadas leading him to appease them with the full stop law and the law of Due Obedience He also had conflicts with the unions which were controlled by the opposing Justicialist Party He resolved the Beagle conflict increased trade with Brazil and proposed the creation of the Contadora support group to mediate between the United States and Nicaragua He passed the first divorce law of Argentina He initiated the Austral plan to improve the national economy but that plan as well as the Spring plan failed The resulting hyperinflation and riots led to his party s defeat in the 1989 presidential elections which was won by Peronist Carlos Menem Alfonsin continued as the leader of the UCR and opposed the presidency of Carlos Menem He initiated the Pact of Olivos with Menem in order to negotiate the terms for the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution Fernando de la Rua led a faction of the UCR that opposed the pact and eventually became president in 1999 Following de la Rua s resignation during the December 2001 riots Alfonsin s faction provided the support needed for the Peronist Eduardo Duhalde to be appointed president by the Congress He died of lung cancer on 31 March 2009 at the age of 82 and was given a large state funeral Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Presidential campaign 3 Presidency 3 1 First days 3 2 Aftermath of the Dirty War 3 3 Relation with trade unions 3 4 Social policies 3 5 Foreign policy 3 6 Economic policy 3 7 Midterm elections 4 Later years 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 Publications 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life and career edit nbsp The house where Alfonsin lived during his childhood in ChascomusRaul Alfonsin was born on 12 March 1927 in the city of Chascomus 123 km 76 mi south of Buenos Aires His parents were Serafin Raul Alfonsin Ochoa and Ana Maria Foulkes His father was of Galician and German descent 2 and his mother was the daughter of Welsh immigrant Ricardo Foulkes and Falkland Islander Maria Elena Ford 3 Following his elementary schooling Raul Alfonsin enrolled at the General San Martin Military Lyceum graduating after five years as a second lieutenant He did not pursue a military career and began studying law instead He began his studies at the National University of La Plata and completed them at the University of Buenos Aires graduating at the age of 23 He married Maria Lorenza Barreneche whom he met in the 1940s at a masquerade ball in 1949 4 They moved to Mendoza La Plata and returned to Chascomus They had six sons of whom only Ricardo Alfonsin would also follow a political career 5 Alfonsin bought a local newspaper El Imparcial He joined the Radical Civic Union UCR in 1946 as a member of the Intransigent Renewal Movement a faction of the party that opposed the incorporation of the UCR into the Democratic Union coalition He was appointed president of the party committee in Chascomus in 1951 and was elected to the city council in 1954 He was detained for a brief time during the reaction of the government of Juan Peron to the bombing of Plaza de Mayo The Revolucion Libertadora ousted Peron from the national government Alfonsin was again briefly detained and forced to leave his office in the city council The UCR broke up into two parties the Intransigent Radical Civic Union UCRI led by Arturo Frondizi and the People s Radical Civic Union UCRP led by Ricardo Balbin and Crisologo Larralde Alfonsin did not like the split but opted to follow the UCRP 6 Alfonsin was elected deputy for the legislature of the Buenos Aires province in 1958 on the UCRP ticket and was reelected in 1962 He moved to La Plata the capital of the province during his tenure President Frondizi was ousted by a military coup on 29 March 1962 which also closed the provincial legislature Alfonsin returned to Chascomus The UCRP prevailed over the UCRI the following year leading to the presidency of Arturo Umberto Illia Alfonsin was elected a national deputy and then vice president of the UCRP bloc in the congress In 1963 he was appointed president of the party committee for the province of Buenos Aires 7 nbsp Alfonsin during his successful 1963 congressional campaignIllia was deposed by a new military coup in June 1966 the Argentine Revolution Alfonsin was detained while trying to hold a political rally in La Plata and a second time when he tried to re open the UCRP committee He was forced to resign as a deputy in November 1966 He was detained a third time in 1968 after a political rally in La Plata He also wrote opinion articles in newspapers under the pseudonyms Alfonso Carrido Lura and Serafin Feijo The Dirty War began during this time as many guerrilla groups rejected both the right wing military dictatorship and the civil governments preferring instead a left wing dictatorship aligned with the Soviet Union as in the Cuban Revolution Alfonsin clarified in his articles that he rejected both the military dictatorship and the guerrillas asking instead for free elections The UCRP became the UCR once more and the UCRI was turned into the Intransigent Party Alfonsin created the Movement for Renewal and Change within the UCR to challenge Balbin s leadership of the party The military dictatorship finally called for free elections allowing Peronism which had been banned since 1955 to take part in them Balbin defeated Alfonsin in the primary elections but lost in the main ones Alfonsin was elected deputy once more 8 Illia was invited in 1975 to a diplomatic mission to the Soviet Union he declined and proposed Alfonsin instead Upon his return Alfonsin became one of the founding members of the Permanent Assembly for Human Rights He served as the defense lawyer for Mario Roberto Santucho leader of the ERP guerrillas but only to carry out due process of law and not because of a genuine desire to support him 9 The 1976 Argentine coup d etat against President Isabel Peron started the National Reorganization Process Alfonsin filed several Habeas corpus motions requesting the freedom of victims of forced disappearances He also visited other countries denouncing those disappearances and violations of human rights He established the magazine Propuesta y control in 1976 one of the few magazines that criticized the military dictatorship during its early stages The magazine was published up to 1978 His editorials were collected in 1980 in the book La cuestion argentina He expressed opposition to the 1982 Falklands War criticizing the deployment of troops by both sides during the conflict 9 The Argentine defeat in the war marked the decline of the military dictatorship The main political parties united in the Multipartidaria issuing a joint request to the dictatorship to call for elections 10 Alfonsin proposed the appointment of Arturo Illia as the head of state of a transition government similar to the Metapolitefsi in Greece The Movement for Renewal and Change took control of the UCR Balbin had died the previous year 11 Presidential campaign editAlfonsin was appointed candidate of the UCR for the 1983 general elections with Victor Martinez as the candidate for the vice presidency Fernando de la Rua who would have run in the primary elections against him declined his candidacy because of Alfonsin s huge popularity The publicity was managed by David Ratto who created the slogan Ahora Alfonsin Spanish Now Alfonsin and the gesture of shaking hands His campaign used a non confrontational approach in stark contrast with the Peronist candidate for the governorship of the Buenos Aires province Herminio Iglesias Iglesias burned a coffin with the seals of the UCR on live television which generated a political scandal Both Iglesias and Italo Luder the Peronist candidate for the presidency saw a decrease in their public image as a result 12 During the campaign both parties made similar proposals to reduce authoritarianism and the political influence of the military and to maintain the Argentine claim in the Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute 13 Alfonsin denounced a pact between the military and the Peronist unions that sought an amnesty for the military He maintained that the armed forces should be subject to the civilian government and that unions should be regulated He also proposed an investigation into the actions of the military during the Dirty War He closed his campaign by reading the preamble of the constitution of Argentina 14 The last rally was at the Plaza de la Republica and was attended by 400 000 people 15 The elections were held on 30 October The Alfonsin Martinez ticket won with 51 7 of the vote followed by Luder Bittel with 40 1 It was the first time since the rise of Peron that the Peronist party was defeated in elections without electoral fraud or proscription The UCR won 128 seats in the Assembly forming a majority and 18 seats in the Senate constituting a minority 18 provinces elected radical governors and 17 elected governors from either the Justicialist or local parties Alfonsin took office on 10 December and gave a speech from the Buenos Aires Cabildo 16 Presidency editMain article Presidency of Raul Alfonsin First days edit nbsp Raul Alfonsin s presidential inauguration 1983The presidential inauguration of Alfonsin was attended by Isabel Peron Despite internal recriminations for the defeat the Peronist party agreed to support Alfonsin as president to prevent a return of the military There were still factions in the military ambitious to keep an authoritarian government and groups such as the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo seeking reparations for the actions of the military during the Dirty War 17 Three days after taking office Alfonsin sent a bill to Congress to revoke the self amnesty law established by the military This made it possible for the judiciary to investigate the crimes committed during the Dirty War 18 During the campaign Alfonsin had promised that he would do this while Luder had been non committal 19 Alfonsin also ordered the initiation of judicial cases against guerrilla leaders Mario Firmenich Fernando Vaca Narvaja Ricardo Obregon Cano Rodolfo Galimberti Roberto Perdia Hector Pardo and Enrique Gorriaran Merlo and military leaders Jorge Videla Emilio Massera Orlando Agosti Roberto Viola Armando Lambruschini Omar Graffigna Leopoldo Galtieri Jorge Anaya and Basilio Lami Dozo 18 He also requested the extradition of guerrilla leaders who were living abroad 20 Most of the first cabinet organized in Chascomus was composed of trusted colleagues of Alfonsin Alfonsin appointed as minister of labor Antonio Mucci who belonged to a faction of the UCR that sought to reduce the influence of Peronism among labor unions and promptly sent a bill to Congress designed to promote independent unions 21 Facing an economic crisis he appointed Bernardo Grinspun as minister of the economy 22 He appointed Aldo Neri minister of health Dante Caputo minister of foreign relations Antonio Troccoli minister of interior affairs Roque Carranza minister of public works Carlos Alconada Aramburu minister of education and Raul Borras minister of defense Juan Carlos Pugliese led the chamber of deputies and Edison Otero was the provisional president of the senate Many presidential negotiations took place at the Quinta de Olivos the official residence of the president rather than at the Casa Rosada 23 Aftermath of the Dirty War edit nbsp Cover of the Nunca mas Never again report by the National Commission on the Disappearance of PersonsThe first priority of Raul Alfonsin was to consolidate democracy incorporate the armed forces into their standard role in a civilian government and prevent further military coups 24 Alfonsin first tried to reduce the political power of the military with budget cuts reductions of military personnel and changing their political tasks 25 As for the crimes committed during the Dirty War Alfonsin was willing to respect the command responsibility and accept the superior orders defense for the military of lower ranks as long as the Junta leaders were sentenced under military justice This project was resisted by human rights organizations such as Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and public opinion 26 as it was expected that the defendants would be acquitted or receive low sentences 20 The military considered that the Dirty War was a legally sanctioned war and considered the prosecutions to be unjustified 20 Alfonsin also established the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons CONADEP composed of several well known personalities to document cases of forced disappearances human rights violations and abduction of children 18 Alfonsin sent a military code bill to Congress so that the military would use it In its Nunca mas report Spanish Never again the CONADEP revealed the wide scope of the crimes committed during the Dirty War and how the Supreme Council of the military had supported the military s actions against the guerrillas 27 As a result Alfonsin sponsored the Trial of the Juntas in which for the first time the leaders of a military coup in Argentina were on trial 28 The first hearings began at the Supreme Court in April 1985 and lasted for the remainder of the year In December the tribunal handed down life sentences for Jorge Videla and former Navy Chief Emilio Massera as well as 17 year sentences for Roberto Eduardo Viola President Leopoldo Galtieri was acquitted of charges related to the repression but he was court martialed in May 1986 for malfeasance during the Falklands War 29 Ramon Camps received a 25 year sentence The trials did not focus only on the military Mario Firmenich was captured in Brazil in 1984 and extradited to Argentina Jose Lopez Rega was extradited from Miami in 1986 because of his links with the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance 30 The military was supported by the families of the victims of subversion a group created to counter the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo This group placed the blame for the Dirty War on the guerrillas but had few followers 31 The trials were followed by bomb attacks and rumors of military protests and even a possible coup Alfonsin sought to appease the military by raising their budget As that was not enough he proposed the full stop law to set a deadline for Dirty War related prosecutions The Congress approved the law despite strong opposition from the public Prosecutors rushed to start cases before the deadline filing 487 charges against 300 officers with 100 of them still in active service Major Ernesto Barreiro refused to appear in court and started a mutiny in Cordoba Lieutenant Colonel Aldo Rico started another mutiny at Campo de Mayo supporting Barreiro The rebels were called Carapintadas Spanish Painted faces because of their use of military camouflage The CGT called a general strike in support of Alfonsin and large masses rallied in the Plaza de Mayo to support the government Alfonsin negotiated directly with the rebels and secured their surrender He announced the end of the crisis from the balcony of the Casa Rosada 32 The mutineers eventually surrendered but the government proceeded with the Law of Due Obedience to regulate the trials However the timing of both events was exploited by the military and the opposition parties described the outcome as a surrender by Alfonsin 33 Aldo Rico escaped from prison in January 1988 and started a new mutiny in a distant regiment in the northeast This time both the military support for the mutiny and the public outcry against it were minimal The army attacked him and Rico surrendered after a brief combat Colonel Mohamed Ali Seineldin launched a new mutiny in late 1988 As in 1987 the mutineers were defeated and jailed but the military was reluctant to open fire against them Alfonsin s goal of reconciling the military with the civil population failed as the latter rejected the military s complaints and the military was focused on internal issues The Movimiento Todos por la Patria a small guerrilla army led by Enrique Gorriaran Merlo staged the attack on the Regiment of La Tablada in 1989 The army killed many of its members and quickly defeated the uprising 34 Relation with trade unions edit nbsp Unioninst Saul Ubaldini led several strikes against AlfonsinDuring his tenure Alfonsin clashed with labor unions in Argentina over economic reforms and trade liberalization policies 35 Peronism still controlled the labor unions the most powerful ones in all of Latin America 13 The biggest one was the General Confederation of Labour CGT Alfonsin sought to reduce the Peronist influence over the unions fearing that they may become a destabilizing force for the fledgling democracy 36 He rejected their custom of holding single candidate internal elections and deemed them totalitarian and not genuine representatives of the workforce His proposal was to change the laws for those internal elections remove the union leaders appointed during the dictatorship and elect new ones under the new laws 37 The CGT rejected the proposal as interventionist and prompted Peronist politicians to vote against it 38 The law was approved by the Chamber of Deputies but failed to pass in the Senate by one vote 39 A second bill proposed simply a call to elections without supervision from the government which was approved As a result the unions remained Peronist 40 The CGT was splintered into internal factions at the time Lorenzo Miguel had close ties to the Justicialist party and led the 62 organizations faction Saul Ubaldini was more confrontational distrusted the politicians of the PJ and was eventually appointed secretary general of the CGT 39 His lack of political ties allowed him to work as a mediator between the union factions Carlos Alderete led a faction closer to Alfonsin named the 15 unions The government sought to deepen the internal divisions between the unions by appointing Alderete as minister of labor and promoting legislation to benefit his faction He was removed after the defeat in the 1987 midterm elections but the government stayed on good terms with his faction 41 Alfonsin kept a regulation from the dictatorship that allowed him to regulate the level of wages He authorized wage increases every three months to keep them up to the inflation rate The CGT rejected this and proposed instead that wages be determined by free negotiations 42 Alfonsin allowed strike actions which were forbidden during the dictatorship which gave the unions another way to expand their influence 43 There were thirteen general strikes and thousands of minor labor conflicts However unlike similar situations in the past the CGT sided with Alfonsin during the military rebellions and did not support the removal of a non Peronist president 38 44 The conflicts were caused by high inflation and the unions requested higher wages in response to it The unions got the support of the non unionized retirees the church and left wing factions Popular support for the government allowed it to endure in spite of opposition from the unions 45 Social policies edit With the end of the military dictatorship Alfonsin pursued cultural and educational policies aimed at reducing the authoritarian customs of several institutions and groups He also promoted freedom of the press Several intellectuals and scientists who had left the country in the previous decade returned which benefited the universities The University of Buenos Aires returned to the quality levels that it had in the 1960s Many intellectuals became involved in politics as well providing a cultural perspective to the political discourse Both Alfonsin and the Peronist Antonio Cafiero benefited 46 Divorce was legalized by a law passed in 1987 The church opposed it but it had huge popular support that included even Catholic factions who reasoned that marital separation already existed and divorce simply made it explicit The church opposed Alfonsin after that point The church successfully exerted pressure to prevent the abolition of religious education In line with the teachings of Pope John Paul II the Church criticized what it perceived as an increase in drugs terrorism abortion and pornography 47 Foreign policy edit nbsp Alfonsin meets with U S President Ronald Reagan Argentina had a tense relationship with the United Kingdom due to the recently concluded Falklands War The British government had temporarily prohibited all foreign ships from entering the exclusion zone of the islands in 1986 Argentina organized air and marine patrols as well as military maneuvers in Patagonia However this was not enough to placate the military hard liners in Argentina 30 Alfonsin proposed the postponement of the sovereignty discussions instead negotiating for a de jure cease of hostilities with a reduction in the number of military forces and normalization of Argentina United Kingdom relations The United Kingdom did not trust the proposal suspecting that it was a cover up for sovereignty discussions 48 The Beagle conflict was still an unresolved problem with Chile despite the 1978 Papal mediation The military troubled by the trial of the juntas called for rejection of the proposed agreement and a continuation of the country s claim over the islands Alfonsin called for a referendum to settle the dispute Despite opposition from the military and the Justicialist party who called for abstention support for the resolution referendum reached 82 49 The bill passed in the Senate by a single vote majority as the PJ maintained its resistance The Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1984 between Chile and Argentina was signed the following year ending the conflict The human rights violations committed by the Chilean president Augusto Pinochet remained a contentious issue as well as the revelation of Chilean assistance to British forces during the Falklands War 50 The Argentine church invited Pope John Paul II for a second visit to Argentina in 1987 to celebrate his successful mediation He celebrated World Youth Day next to the Obelisk of Buenos Aires and gave a mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Lujan 51 Argentina allied with Brazil Uruguay and Peru three countries that had also recently ended their local military dictatorships to mediate in the conflict between the United States and Nicaragua 52 They created the Contadora support group to support the Contadora group from South America Both groups negotiated together but ultimately failed because of the reluctance of both Nicaragua and the United States to change their positions The group changed its scope later to discuss foreign debt and diplomacy with the United Kingdom in relation to the Falklands conflict 53 Initially Alfonsin refused to foster diplomatic relations with the Brazilian military government and only did so when the dictatorship ended and Jose Sarney became president One of their initial concerns was to increase Argentine Brazilian trade Both presidents met in Foz do Iguacu and issued a joint declaration about the peaceful use of nuclear power A second meeting in Buenos Aires strengthened the trade agreements Argentina and Brazil signed the Program of Integration and Economic Cooperation PICE 54 and in 1988 both countries and Uruguay agreed to create a common market This led to the 1991 Treaty of Asuncion that created the Mercosur 55 Alfonsin was the first Argentine head of state to give an official visit to the USSR Economic policy edit nbsp Inflation rates in 1989 and 1990Alfonsin began his term with many economic problems In the previous decade the national economy had contracted by 15 56 The foreign debt was nearly 43 billion dollars by the end of the year and the country had narrowly prevented a sovereign default in 1982 During that year the gross domestic product fell by 5 6 and the manufacturing profits by 55 Unemployment was at nearly 10 and inflation was nearly 209 It also appeared unlikely that the country would receive the needed foreign investment 57 The country had a deficit of 6 7 billion Possible solutions such as a devaluation of the currency privatization of industry or restrictions on imports would probably have proven to be unpopular 22 Initially the government did not take any strong action to tackle the economic problems 56 Bernardo Grinspun the first minister of the economy arranged an increase in wages reaching the levels of 1975 This caused inflation to reach 32 He also tried to negotiate more favorable terms on the country s foreign debt but the negotiations failed Risking a default he negotiated with the IMF which requested spending cuts International credits prevented default at the end of 1984 but he resigned in March 1985 when the debt reached 1 billion and the IMF denied further credits Grinspun was succeeded by Juan Vital Sourrouille who designed the Austral plan in 1985 This plan froze prices and wages stopped the printing of money arranged spending cuts and established a new currency the Austral worth 1 United States dollar The plan was a success in the short term and choked inflation 58 However most of the initial popularity of Alfonsin had declined by this point and could not persuade many of the benefits of austerity for the long term improvement of the economy 56 Inflation rose again by the end of the year the CGT opposed the wage freeze and the business community opposed the price freeze Alfonsin thought that the privatization of some state assets and deregulation of the economy might work but those proposals were opposed by both the PJ and his own party 59 The Austral plan was also undermined by populist economic policies held by the government 56 With the support of the World Bank the government tried new measures in 1987 including an increase in taxes privatizations and a decrease in government spending Those measures could not be enforced the government had lost the 1987 midterm elections the 15 unions that had earlier supported the government distanced themselves from it and the business community was unable to suggest a clear course of action The PJ aiming for a victory in the 1989 presidential elections opposed the measures that it believed would have a negative social impact 60 The Spring plan sought to keep the economy stable until the elections by freezing prices and wages and reducing the federal deficit This plan had an even worse reception than the Austral plan and none of the parties supported it The World Bank and the IMF refused to extend credits to Argentina Big exporters refused to sell dollars to the Central Bank which depleted its reserves 61 The austral was devaluated in February 1989 and the high inflation turned into hyperinflation The US Dollar was worth 14 Australes by the beginning of 1989 and 17000 by May 56 The 1989 presidential elections took place during this crisis and the Justicialist Carlos Menem became the new president 62 Midterm elections edit nbsp Alfonsin visiting an exhibition in 1986The actions taken against the military contributed to a strong showing by the UCR in the November 1985 legislative elections They gained one seat in the Chamber of Deputies the lower house of Congress which meant control of 130 of the 254 seats The Justicialists lost eight seats leaving 103 and smaller provincial parties made up the difference Alfonsin surprised observers in April 1986 by announcing the creation of a panel entrusted to plan a transfer of the nation s capital to Viedma a small coastal city 800 km 500 mi south of Buenos Aires This proposal was never implemented as it was too expensive because Viedma lacked the required urban infrastructure 63 His proposals boldly called for constitutional amendments creating a Parliamentary system including a prime minister and were well received by the Chamber of Deputies though they encountered strong opposition in the Senate 64 The government suffered a big setback in the 1987 legislative election The UCR lost the majority in the chamber of deputies All provinces elected Peronist governors with the exception of Cordoba and Rio Negro Along with the city of Buenos Aires a federal district at the time they were the only districts where the UCR prevailed As a result the government could not move forward with its legislative agenda and the PJ only supported minor projects The PJ was strengthened for the 1989 presidential elections and the UCR sought to propose governor Eduardo Angeloz as a candidate Angeloz was a rival of Alfonsin within the party 65 Later years edit nbsp Last public appearance of Alfonsin center with President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner right and First Gentleman Nestor Kirchner left 2008 Amid rampant inflation Angeloz was heavily defeated by PJ candidate Carlos Menem in the 1989 election By the winter of 1989 the inflation had grown so severe that Alfonsin transferred power to Menem on 8 July five months earlier than scheduled Alfonsin stayed on as president of the UCR leaving after the party s defeat in the 1991 legislative elections Suffering damage to its image because of the hyperinflation of 1989 the UCR lost in several districts Alfonsin became president of the party again in 1993 He supported the creation of a special budget for the province of Buenos Aires led by governor Eduardo Duhalde The radical legislator Leopoldo Moreau supported the new budget even more vehemently than the Peronists Both parties had an informal alliance in the province Alfonsin also supported the amendment to the constitution of Buenos Aires that allowed Duhalde to run for re election 66 President Carlos Menem sought a constitutional amendment to allow his re election and Alfonsin opposed it The victory in the 1993 midterm elections strengthened the PJ which approved the bill in the Senate Menem proposed a referendum on the amendment to force the radical deputies to support it He also proposed a bill for a law that would allow a constitutional amendment with a simple majority of the Congress 67 As a result Alfonsin made the Pact of Olivos with him With this agreement the UCR would support Menem s proposal but with further amendments that would reduce presidential power The Council of Magistracy of the Nation reduced the influence of the executive power over the judiciary the city of Buenos Aires would become an autonomous territory allowed to elect its own mayor and the presidential term of office would be reduced to four years The presidential elections would include the two round system and the electoral college would be abolished Alfonsin was elected to the constituent assembly that worked for the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution A faction of the UCR led by Fernando de la Rua opposed the pact but the party as a whole supported Alfonsin 68 The UCR got only 19 of the vote in the elections attaining a third position in the 1995 presidential elections behind the Frepaso when Menem was re elected Alfonsin resigned the presidency of the party in that year 69 The UCR and the Frepaso united as a political coalition the Alliance for Work Justice and Education led by Alfonsin Fernando de la Rua and Rodolfo Terragno from the UCR and Carlos Alvarez and Graciela Fernandez Meijide from the Frepaso The coalition won the 1997 legislative elections 70 Alfonsin did not agree with de la Rua about the fixed exchange rate used by then He thought that it had been a good measure in the past but had become detrimental to the Argentine economy while de la Rua supported it 71 Alfonsin suffered a car crash in the Rio Negro province in 1999 during the campaign for governor Pablo Verani They were on Route 6 and he was ejected from the car because he was not wearing a seat belt He was hospitalized for 39 days De la Rua became president in the 1999 elections defeating the governor of Buenos Aires Eduardo Duhalde Alfonsin was elected Senator for Buenos Aires Province in October 2001 De la Rua resigned during the December 2001 riots and the Congress appointed Adolfo Rodriguez Saa who resigned as well Alfonsin instructed the Radical legislators to support Duhalde as the new president He also gave him two ministers Horacio Jaunarena for Defense and Jorge Vanossi for Justice The radical support helped Duhalde overcome the ambitions of Carlos Ruckauf and Jose Manuel de la Sota who also had ambitions to be appointed president 72 Alfonsin s health problems later in the year led him to step down to be replaced by Diana Conti 73 In 2006 Alfonsin supported a faction of the UCR that favored the idea of carrying an independent candidate for the 2007 presidential elections The UCR instead of fielding its own candidate endorsed Roberto Lavagna a center left economist who presided over the dramatic recovery in the Argentine economy from 2002 until he parted ways with President Nestor Kirchner in December 2005 Unable to sway enough disaffected Kirchner supporters Lavagna garnered third place 74 Alfonsin was honored by President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner with a bust of his likeness at the Casa Rosada on 1 October 2008 This was his last public appearance 75 Death edit nbsp Alfonsin s memorial service at the Argentine National CongressMain article Death and state funeral of Raul Alfonsin Alfonsin died at home on 31 March 2009 at the age of 82 after being diagnosed a year before with lung cancer The streets around his house at the Santa Fe avenue were filled with hundreds of people who started a candlelight vigil The radical Julio Cobos Fernandez de Kirchner s vice president was the acting president at the moment and ordered three days of national mourning There was a ceremony in the Congress where his body was displayed in the Blue Hall that was attended by almost a thousand people 76 His widow Maria Lorenza Barreneche could not attend the funeral because of her own poor health 77 It was attended by former presidents Carlos Menem Fernando de la Rua Eduardo Duhalde and Nestor Kirchner all the members of the Supreme Court of Argentina mayor Mauricio Macri governor Daniel Scioli the president of Uruguay Tabare Vazquez and several other politicians The coffin was moved to La Recoleta Cemetery He was placed next to the graves of other important historical figures of the UCR such as Leandro N Alem Hipolito Yrigoyen and Arturo Illia 78 At the international level Peru set a day of national mourning and Paraguay set three days The governments of Brazil Chile Colombia France Mexico Paraguay Peru Spain Uruguay and the United States sent messages of condolence 79 In addition to Tabare Vazquez Julio Maria Sanguinetti of Uruguay and Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil attended the ceremony 78 Legacy edit nbsp President Mauricio Macri opens an exhibition about Raul AlfonsinHistorians Felix Luna Miguel Angel de Marco and Fernando Rocchi all praise the role of Raul Alfonsin in the aftermath of the Dirty War and the restoration of democracy Luna also considers that Alfonsin was an effective president and that he set an example of not using the state for personal profit De Marco points out that it was a delicate time period and any mistake could have endangered the newly founded democracy and led to another coup 80 The aforementioned historians do not agree though on their view of the Pact of Olivos Luna considers that it was a necessary evil to prevent the chaos that would have been generated if Menem managed to proceed with the constitutional amendment without negotiating with the UCR De Marco and Rocchi instead believe that it was the biggest mistake of Alfonsin s political career 80 Alfonsin received the 1985 Princess of Asturias Award for international cooperation because of both his role in ending the Beagle dispute and his work to reestablish democracy in Argentina He was named Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires Province in 2008 and Illustrious Citizen of Buenos Aires in 2009 The latter award was granted posthumously and received by his son Ricardo Alfonsin ambassador to Spain 81 Publications editLa cuestion argentina Propuesta Argentina 1981 ISBN 9505490488 82 Que es el radicalismo Circulo de lectores 1983 ISBN 9500701812 82 Ahora mi propuesta politica Sudamericana 1983 ISBN 9503700086 82 Inedito una batalla contra la dictadura Legasa 1986 ISBN 9506000883 82 El poder de la democracia Fundacion Plural 1987 ISBN 9509910902 82 Politica social y democracia la experiencia del cono sur Intercontinental 1993 ISBN 987917318X 82 Democracia y consenso Consejo Economico y Social 1996 ISBN 9500509148 82 Memoria politica transicion a la democracia y derechos humanos Fondo de Cultura Economica 2004 ISBN 950557617X 82 Fundamentos de la republica democratica curso de teoria del estado Eudeba 2006 ISBN 9502315626 82 References edit Infobae 2013 Diez anecdotas de Alfonsin el padre de la democracia moderna en Argentina in Spanish Retrieved 30 October 2013 Lagleyze p 8 Quiros Carlos Alberto 1986 Guia Radical Galerna p 13 ISBN 9789505561858 Murio Maria Lorenza Barrenechea la esposa de Raul Alfonsin Clarin Argentine newspaper 6 January 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Lagleyze pp 9 10 Lagleyze pp 10 13 Lagleyze pp 13 14 Lagleyze pp 14 19 a b Rock p 387 Rock p 384 Lagleyze pp 20 23 Lagleyze p 23 a b Rock p 388 Lagleyze pp 23 26 Rock 389 Lagleyze p 26 Rock p 390 a b c Tedesco p 66 Mendez pp 12 13 a b c Lewis p 152 Tedesco pp 73 74 a b Lewis p 148 Lagleyze pp 32 33 Tedesco p 62 Tedesco p 64 Tedesco p 65 Tedesco pp 67 68 Tedesco p 68 Rock p 395 a b Rock p 401 Lewis p 154 Lewis pp 154 155 Romero p 251 Romero pp 264 265 Dean Adam 2022 Opening Argentina Menem s Repression of the CGT Opening Up by Cracking Down Labor Repression and Trade Liberalization in Democratic Developing Countries Cambridge University Press pp 113 147 doi 10 1017 9781108777964 007 ISBN 978 1 108 47851 9 Tedesco pp 62 63 Tedesco pp 71 72 a b Tedesco p 73 a b Lewis p 156 Rock p 397 Romero p 253 Tedesco p 72 Rock 391 Lewis p 155 Romero pp 252 253 Romero pp 245 246 Romero pp 246 247 Carlos Escude and Andres Cisneros 2000 Enero de 1984 julio de 1989 January 1984 July 1989 in Spanish CARI Retrieved 20 October 2015 Lewis pp 153 154 Carlos Escude and Andres Cisneros 2000 Las relaciones con los paises latinoamericanos Relation with Latin American countries in Spanish CARI Retrieved 5 October 2015 Las visitas de Juan Pablo II a la Argentina The visits of John Paul II to Argentina in Spanish La Nacion 1 April 2005 Archived from the original on 7 January 2016 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Romero p 247 Carlos Escude and Andres Cisneros 2000 El Grupo de Contadora y el Grupo de Apoyo a Contadora el Grupo de los Ocho The Contadora group and the Contadora support group the group of the eight in Spanish CARI Retrieved 20 October 2015 Carlos Escude and Andres Cisneros 2000 Las relaciones con Brasil The relations with Brazil in Spanish CARI Retrieved 20 October 2015 Carlos Escude and Andres Cisneros 2000 Las relaciones con Uruguay The relations with Uruguay in Spanish CARI Retrieved 20 October 2015 a b c d e Hedges p 245 Rock p 391 Rock p 398 Romero pp 257 258 Romero pp 258 259 McGuire p 215 Romero pp 267 268 Hedges p 246 Romero p 276 Romero p 264 Reato pp 58 59 Romero pp 285 286 Reato p 73 Lagleyze pp 26 27 Lagleyze p 27 Reato p 59 Reato pp 61 62 Lagleyze pp 27 29 Cristina Kirchner presidenta Cristina Kirchner president in Spanish La Nacion 29 October 2007 Retrieved 31 March 2016 Clifford Kraus 31 March 2009 Raul Alfonsin 82 Former Argentine Leader Dies The New York Times Retrieved 10 July 2015 Un homenaje multitudinario en la calle A populated homage in the streets La Nacion in Spanish 1 April 2009 Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 14 August 2015 Murio Maria Lorenza Barrenechea la esposa de Raul Alfonsin Clarin Argentine newspaper 6 January 2016 Retrieved 1 February 2016 a b Lagleyze p 29 Lideres mundiales envian sus condolencias Global leaders send their condolences La Nacion in Spanish 1 April 2009 Retrieved 14 August 2015 a b Constanza Longarte 2 April 2009 Historiadores destacan el papel de Alfonsin como restaurador de la democracia Historians praise the role of Alfonsin in the recovery of democracy in Spanish La Nacion Retrieved 14 August 2015 Lagleyze pp 47 49 a b c d e f g h i Libros escritos por Alfonsin Books written by Alfonsin in Spanish Alfonsin org Retrieved 19 December 2023 Bibliography editHedges Jill 2011 Argentina A modern history United States I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84885 654 7 Lagleyze Julio Luqui 2010 Grandes biografias de los 200 anos Raul Ricardo Alfonsin Argentina Clarin ISBN 978 987 07 0836 0 Lewis Daniel 2015 The History of Argentina United States ABC Clio ISBN 978 1 61069 860 3 McGuire James 1997 Peronism without Peron United States Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804736558 Mendez Juan 1987 Truth and Partial Justice in Argentina United States Americas Watch Report ISBN 9780938579342 Romero Luis Alberto 2013 1994 A History of Argentina in the Twentieth Century United States The Pennsylvania University Press ISBN 978 0 271 06228 0 Rock David 1987 Argentina 1516 1987 From Spanish Colonization to Alfonsin United States University of California Press ISBN 0 520 06178 0 Retrieved 14 July 2015 Tedesco Laura 1999 Democracy in Argentina Hope and Disillusion United States Frank Cass Publishers ISBN 978 0 7146 4978 8 External links edit nbsp Media related to Raul Alfonsin at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article Raul Alfonsin nbsp Spanish Wikiquote has quotations related to Raul Alfonsin Official site in Spanish Biography by CIDOB Foundation in Spanish Discurso del presidente Raul Alfonsin in Spanish Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byReynaldo Bignone President of Argentina1983 1989 Succeeded byCarlos Menem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raul Alfonsin amp oldid 1190776614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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