1995 Argentine general election

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1995 Argentine general election

← 1989 May 14, 1995 1999 →
Registered22,178,201
Turnout82.08%
  File:Horacio Massaccesi.jpg
Nominee Carlos Saúl Menem José Octavio Bordón Horacio Massaccesi
Party Justicialist Party Front for a Country in Solidarity Radical Civic Union
Home state La Rioja Mendoza Río Negro
Running mate Carlos Ruckauf Carlos Álvarez Antonio María Hernández
States carried 23 CABA 0
Popular vote 8,687,511 5,096,104 2,956,137
Percentage 49.94% 29.30% 16.99%


President before election

Carlos Menem
Justicialist Party

Elected President

Carlos Menem
Justicialist Party

The Argentine general election of 1995 was held on 14 May. Voters chose both the President and their legislators and with a turnout of 82.1%.

Background

The Justicialist Party had been founded in 1945 by Juan Perón, largely on the promise of greater self-reliance, increased state ownership in the economy and a shift in national policy to benefit "the other half" of Argentine society. Taking office on Perón's ticket in 1989 amid the worst crisis in a hundred years, President Carlos Menem had begun the systematic sell-off of Argentina's array of State enterprises, which had produced nearly half the nation's goods and services. Following 18 months of very mixed results, in February 1991 Menem reached out to his Foreign Minister, Domingo Cavallo, whose experience as an economist included a brief but largely positive stint as the nation's Central Bank president in 1982. His introduction of a fixed exchange rate via his Convertibility Plan led to sharp drops in interest rates and inflation, though the sudden recovery and Cavallo's fixed exchange rate (converted to 1 peso per dollar in 1992) led to a fivefold jump in imports (far outpacing the flush growth in demand). A wave of layoffs after 1992 created a tense labor climate often worsened by the flamboyant Menem, who also diluted basic labor laws, leading to less overtime pay and increasing unemployment and underemployment. Private-sector lay-offs, dismissed as a natural consequence of recovering productivity (which had not risen in 20 years), added to mounting state enterprise and government layoffs, leading to a rise in unemployment from 7% in 1992 to 12% by 1994 (after GDP had leapt by a third in just four years). In this policy irony lay the Justicialists' greatest weakness ahead of the 1995 election.[1]

The election itself created yet another unexpected turn. Barred from immediate reelection by the 1853 Argentine Constitution, President Menem reached out to his predecessor and head of the embattled centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR), Raúl Alfonsín. Meeting at the presidential residence in Olivos in November 1993 to negotiate an extensive amendment of the Constitution, the two leaders came to an agreement of mutual benefit: Alfonsín obtained the direct election of the mayor of (UCR-leaning) Buenos Aires (depriving the presidency of a right held since 1880 to appoint its mayor) and an expansion in the Argentine Senate from 48 to 72 members (3 per province), which would assure the runner-up (presumably the UCR) the third seat; Menem, in return, secured his right to run for reelection.[1][2]

Both men faced dissension in their parties' ranks after the 1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution was unveiled in August. Alfonsín's candidate in the UCR primaries, Río Negro Province Governor Horacio Massaccesi, defeated Federico Storani and Rodolfo Terragno for the nomination over their opposition to the Olivos Pact. Menem, in turn, had lost a number of Congressmen from his party after Carlos Álvarez led a center-left splinter group in revolt over Menem's privatizations and unchecked corruption. His Frente Grande had become influential after merging with fellow ex-Peronist José Octavio Bordón in 1994, ahead of the May 14, 1995 election date. Bordón, a popular Mendoza Province Senator was a centrist who also lent the leftist Álvarez, whose strength was in Buenos Aires, appeal in Argentina's hinterland (which had benefited least from the 1991-94 boom). They combined forces to create the FREPASO, adding Argentina's struggling Socialists.[3]

The new constitutional rules governing elections provided opportunities for parties stuck in 2nd or 3rd place in the polls, as the Frepaso and UCR were, respectively. Bypassing the previous electoral college system, a victory by direct proportional voting could be achieved by either through a run-off election (in case no candidate obtained a clear majority). The Justicialists enjoyed a clear advantage, given polls and their control of both chambers of Congress; but cracks began to develop as 1994 drew to a close. Local prosperity, the guarantor of Menem's presumptive victory, was shaken by the Mexican peso crisis in December. Dependent on foreign investment to maintain its central bank reserves (which fell by US$6 billion in days), its sudden scarcity led to a wave of capital flight out of Buenos Aires' growing banks and to an unforeseen recession. Concurrent revelations of gross corruption surrounding the purchase of IBM computers for the antiquated National Bank of Argentina (the nation's largest), further added to the opposition's hopes that a runoff might still be needed in May.[3]

Between them, the Frepaso enjoyed the advantage. Sporting charismatic leadership, they hoped to displace the UCR (Argentina's oldest existing party) from its role as the Peronists' chief opposition. The UCR had been badly tarnished by President Raúl Alfonsín's chaotic 1983-89 term, though its candidate, Río Negro Province Governor Horacio Massaccesi, had earned international renown in 1991 for storming a local National Bank branch in search of needed funds being retained by the federal government for what seemed to be political reasons.[4] The UCR, moreover, still had its name recognition and organized, if frayed political machinery, controlled by Alfonsín and popular Córdoba Province Governor Eduardo Angeloz. As election day drew near, analysts debated not only the possibility of a runoff, but also which of the two opposition parties would face Menem in such a case.[5]

Ultimately, corruption and the sudden recession were not enough to keep the unflappable Menem from a first-round victory. The big tent Justicialist Party, allied in many districts to local parties, formed an electoral front which obtained almost half of the total vote. The Frepaso garnered nearly 30%, and though their hopes for a runoff were stymied, this was considered a very good result for a party assembled only the previous year. Frepaso, however, came ahead in the presidential race only in two districts: Santa Fe Province and the city of Buenos Aires. The UCR, a major political force in Argentina since the beginning of the 20th century, came in third with only 17% of the vote.[6]

All provinces except Corrientes also elected governors during 1995; several but not all provinces conducted their elections on the same date as the national one. A number of municipalities elected legislative officials (concejales) and in some cases also a mayor. The Justicialists obtained 14 of the 23 governorships and the UCR, 5. Among Argentina's larger cities, only Bahía Blanca and Mar del Plata kept a UCR mayor (though Buenos Aires would elect one in 1996).[7][8]

The legislative elections, where half the seats in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies were contested, saw the Justicialists obtain a large majority (more votes that its two closest opponents combined), losing in only 5 districts out of 24; of the 130 seats in play, the secured 68, the UCR, 28 seats, and Frepaso obtained 20 seats. The UCR lost 15 and, on a district basis, they did not get the majority vote in any district. The Frepaso won in the city of Buenos Aires and picked up 12 seats. Local parties won in two districts (Salta Province and Neuquén Province). The newly expanded Argentine Senate, as Menem and Alfonsín had intended, benefited both parties.[7][8]

Candidates For President

Results

President

Presidential
candidate
Vice Presidential
candidate
Party or coalition Votes %
Carlos Menem Carlos Ruckauf
    Frente Recuperación Ética
    • Partido Conservador Popular
    • Movimiento Línea Popular
8,687,511 49.94
José Octavio Bordón Carlos Álvarez
5,096,104 29.30
Horacio Massaccesi Alberto Natale 2,956,137 16.99
Aldo Rico Julio Fernández Pezzano Movement for Dignity and Independence 310,069 1.78
Fernando Solanas Carlos Imizcoz
Alianza Sur
71,625 0.41
Fernando López de Zavalía Pedro Benejam Republican Force 64,007 0.37
Luis Zamora Silvia Díaz Workers' Socialist Movement 45,973 0.26
Jorge Altamira Norma Molle
Alianza de Frente Unidad
Trabajadora-Obrero
32,299 0.19
Mario Mazzitelli Alberto Fonseca Authentic Socialist Party 32,174 0.18
Lía Méndez Liliana Ambrosio Humanist Party 31,203 0.18
Alcides Christiansen José Montes
Alianza Movimiento al Socialismo
-de los Trabajadores Socialistas
27,643 0.16
Humberto Tumini Jorge Reyna Corriente Patria Libre 24,326 0.14
Amílcar Santucho Irma Antognazzi Movimiento Democrático Antiimperialista 13,066 0.08
Ricardo Alberto Paz[note 1] Adolfo González Chávez
Alianza Frente para
la Coincidencia Patriótica
    • Partido Nacionalista Constitucional
    • Partido Demócrata Conservador
    • Movimiento Popular Bonaerense
    • Defensa Provincial - Bandera Blanca
    • Federación Socialista Auténtico
3,147 0.02
Total 17,395,284 100
Positive votes 17,395,284 95.56
Blank votes 653,443 3.59
Invalid votes 125,112 0.69
Votes errors 30,085 0.16
Turnout 18,203,924 82.08
Abstentions 3,974,277 17.92
Registered voters 22,178,201 100
Source: Dirección Nacional Electoral - Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013
Votes
Menem
49.94%
Bordón
29.30%
Massaccesi
16.99%
Others
3.77%

Argentine Congress

Party/Electoral Alliance Lower House
Seats
Vote Percentage Senate
Justicialist Party 131 43.0% 39
Radical Civic Union 68 21.7% 20
FREPASO 25 20.7% 3
UCeDé 4 3.2%
MODIN 3 1.7%
Autonomist-Liberal Pact
(Corrientes Province)
4 0.9% 1
Salta Renewal Party 3 0.8% 1
Other regional parties 14 4.5% 8
Others 5 3.5%
Invalid votes 6.9%
Total seats 257 72

[9][10]

Notes

  1. ^ Juan Carlos Onganía, former dictator between 1966 and 1970, was originally a candidate for president while Ricardo Alberto Paz was a candidate for vice president. Before the election Onganía resigned from the formula for health reasons, although his name still appeared on the ballot. Died three weeks after the election.

References

  1. ^ a b Todo Argentina: Menem Template:Es icon
  2. ^ Todo Argentina: 1993 Template:Es icon
  3. ^ a b Todo Argentina: 1994 Template:Es icon
  4. ^ Clarín Template:Es icon
  5. ^ La Nación. May 13, 1995.
  6. ^ Todo Argentina: 1995
  7. ^ a b Andy Tow's Electoral Atlas of Argentina Archived 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b Microsemanario 195 Template:Es icon
  9. ^ Nohlen, Dieter. Elections in the Americas. Oxford University Press, 2005.
  10. ^ "Andy Tow's Electoral Atlas of Argentina". Archived from the original on 2007-02-16. Retrieved 2007-01-01.