7D (Argentina)
The 7D, which stands for December 7, is a special date in Argentina for the conflict between Fernández de Kirchner government and the media. Feeling that the Clarín newspaper was responsible for the 2008 Argentine government conflict with the agricultural sector and the defeat at the 2009 legislative elections, the government created a media law to force the Grupo Clarín to sell their media assets. Clarín deemed that specific articles of that law that ordered that were unconstitutional, and began a trial over them. Clarín was benefited by an injunction for the duration of the trial, and in 2012 the Court pointed that the injunction should not extend beyond December 7, requesting the judges to make a sentence. The actual events that should take place on December 7 became a huge controversy in Argentina.
Context
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner began her first presidency in 2007. The following year she tried to raise the taxes over the exports of primary products, leading to a conflict with the agricultural sector. The Congress voted the bill, got a tie, and vice-president Julio Cobos cast a negative vote; the rejection of the bill ended the conflict.[1] During the conflict the government accused both the demonstrators and the press, mainly the Clarín newspaper, of attempting a coup d'état.[2]
The conflict reduced the public support to the Kirchner administration, which stayed low as of 2009. The government anticipated the legislative elections to June, which were initially intended to be celebrated in October. The former president Néstor Kirchner run in a deputee candidacy. However, he lost the election to Francisco de Narváez.[3] Blaming Clarín for the defeat, kirchnerism prepared a new media law, which would force the Clarín Group to get rid of several licenses of radio, TV channels and TV cable. This could be done because, although the elections were anticipated, the date for the renewal of the chamber stayed the same, allowing a longer period for the defeated party to keep their majority.
Clarín began a trial on a pair of articles of the law, maintaining that they were not constitutional, and got an injunction that prevented the application of the law on them during the trial. It was the only media group that began such a trial, and the injunction benefited only them. However, the kirchnerist administration refused to apply the law on the other media groups of the country until the trial of Clarín is over. As time passed without a sentence on the actual topic, the Supreme Court declared that the injunction should not extend beyond December 7, 2012, without a sentence.
Escalation of events
The government announced in September, during a spot, that they would sell Clarín's licences if they had not proposed a plan to do so themselves on December 7. The sport used the name "7D" for it, which was incorporated in public discourse since then.
Popular support
On 9 December 2012, around 800 thousand persons went to Plaza De Mayo of Argentina for support to the president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and request to Argentinian justice fulfill the law [1][2] [3] .
7D Cuenta con sitio web oficial de la ONU el es Cual: http://Sietede.com
References
Bibliography
- Fraga, Rosendo (2010). Fin de ciKlo: ascenso, apogeo y declinación del poder kirchnerista (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Ediciones B. ISBN 978-987-627-167-7.