Argentine general election, 2007

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Argentina

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Cristina Fernández and Néstor Kirchner during the campaign
Cristina Fernández and Néstor Kirchner during the campaign

Argentina held national presidential and legislative elections on 28 October 2007. Several local elections for provincial governors (separate from the national ones) took place during the year. For the national elections, each of the 23 provinces and the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires are considered electoral districts.

According to the rules for elections in Argentina, to win the presidential election without needing a runoff round, a candidate needs either no more than 45% of the affirmative valid votes or more than 40% of the affirmative valid votes with a difference of 10 percentage points from the second candidate. As of October 30, Cristina Fernández has 44.91% of the votes and a 22%-point lead with only 3.49%-points not yet counted. She therefore satisfies the second rule, and has won the presidency without the need for a runoff round.[1]

Contents

[edit] Organization of the elections

Elections for a successor to President Néstor Kirchner were held in October. Candidates included former minister of Economy Roberto Lavagna, Elisa Carrió, Ricardo López Murphy and Néstor Pitrola. Kirchner was allowed to pursue one consecutive reelection, but it was announced in late June that Kirchner's wife, Senator Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, would run instead. In total, fourteen candidates registered for the election.

In addition to the president, each district elected a number of members of the Lower House (the Chamber of Deputies) roughly proportional to their population. Eight districts (Tierra del Fuego, Entre Ríos, Chaco, Santiago del Estero, Salta, Río Negro, Neuquén and Buenos Aires City) also elected members to the Upper House of Congress (the Senate); as usual, three senators were elected (two for the majority, one for the first minority).

In most provinces, the national elections were conducted in parallel with local ones, whereby a number of municipalities elect legislative officials (concejales) and in some cases also a mayor (or the equivalent executive post). Each provincial election follows local regulations and some, such as Tucumán, hold municipal elections on other dates in the year.

[edit] Elected governors

The elections for governors took place in ten provinces in September, which were won in six provinces by Kirchner's Front for Victory. Hermes Binner was elected governor of Santa Fe, defeating the Peronist Rafael Bielsa, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Kirchner. Binner thus became the first Socialist governor in Argentina's history, and the first non-Justicialist to rule the Santa Fe province. Center-left Fabiana Ríos (ARI) became the first woman to be elected governor of Tierra del Fuego, while the right-wing Mauricio Macri was elected Mayor of Buenos Aires (a similar office to governor) in June 2007.[2]

[edit] List of elected governors

Sources: Clarin, 3 September 2007. National Electoral Direction, Ministry of Interior. Corrientes Province and Santiago del Estero Province do not have elections for governors in 2007, as they already took place in 2005.

[edit] Presidential candidates

A total of 17 candidates were in the presidential ballot, although only 3 or 4 garnered statistically significant amounts of support in polls. The candidates were as follows:

[edit] Presidential election results

[discuss] – [edit]
Summary of the 28 October 2007 Argentine presidential election results
These are partial results with 96.58% of polling stations counted; complete results are not available at the official Interior Ministry web site.
Presidential candidate Vice-presidential candidate Party Votes %
Cristina Fernández Julio César Cleto Cobos Front for Victory Alliance 8,204,624 44.92
Elisa Carrió Rubén Héctor Giustiniani Civic Coalition Confederation 4,191,361 22.95
Roberto Lavagna Gerardo Rubén Morales An Advanced Nation (UNA) 3,083,577 16.88
Alberto Rodríguez Saá Héctor María Maya Justice, Union, and Liberty Front Alliance 1,408,736 7.71
Fernando Solanas Angel Francisco Cadelli Authentic Socialist Party 292,933 1.60
Jorge Omar Sobisch Jorge Asís Total 284,161 1.56
Movement for the United Provinces 150,458 0.82
Popular Union 67,758 0.37
Movement of Neighborhood Action 55,365 0.30
Movement for Dignity and Independence 10,580 0.06
Ricardo López Murphy Esteban Bullrich Recreate for Growth 264,746 1.45
Vilma Ripoll Héctor Bidonde Socialist Movement of the Workers 138,601 0.76
Néstor Pitrola Gabriela Adriana Arroyo Workers' Party 113,004 0.62
José Alberto Montes Héctor Antonio Heberling PTS-MAS-Socialist Left Alliance 94,777 0.52
Luis Alberto Ammann Rogelio Deleonardi Wide Front Towards Latin American Unity Alliance 75,692 0.41
Raúl Castells Nina Pelozo Independent Movement of the Retired and the Unemployed 54,893 0.30
Gustavo Luis Breide Obeid Héctor Raúl Vergara Popular Party for Reconstruction 45,113 0.25
Juan Ricardo Mussa Bernardo Nespral Popular Loyalty Confederation 12,832 0.07
Total valid votes 18,865,030 100.00
Blank votes 934,739 4.81
Null votes 217,744 1.12
Contested votes 35,061 0.18
Total votes (turnout 74.14%) 19,452,594 100.00
Source: Interior Ministry

[edit] Legislative election results

Elections were also held for 130 of the 257 members of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies and for 24 of the 72 members of the Argentine Senate. Results were as follows:

Chamber of Deputies
Senate

[edit] References

[edit] External links