Argentine legislative election, 2001

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Argentina

Politics portal

Argentina held national parliamentary elections on Sunday, 14 October 2001. Turnout was 75.6% and the results were as follows:

Chamber of Deputies

Party/Electoral Alliance Seats Vote Percentage
Justicialist Party 121 35.8%
UCR
Broad Front
Frepaso
65
8
7
Alliance 80 22.6%
ARI 16 7.4%
Front for Change 4 4.1%
Action for the Republic 4 1.1%
Democratic Progressive Party 4 0.8%
Neuquén People's Movement 3 0.4%
Federalist Unity 2 2.1%
Self-determination and Freedom 2 1.0%
Others 21 24.7%
Invalid votes 24.0%
Total seats 257

[1]

Senate

Party/alliance Seats Vote percentage
Justicialist Party 40 31.3%
Frepaso
UCR
19
6
17.7%
3.5%
Alliance 25 21.2%
Neuquén People's Movement 2 0.4%
ARI 1 4.9%
Front for Everyone
(Corrientes Province)
1 2.5%
Republican Force 1 0.7%
Salta Renewal Party 1 0.6%
Front with Everyone
(La Rioja Province)
1 0.3%
Others - 38.1%
Invalid votes 22.6%
Total seats 72

[1][2]

Background

The opposition Justicialist Party took control of both houses of the National Congress, severely limiting the power of the administration of the UCR-FrePaSo party alliance led by President Fernando de la Rúa, which lost 26 seats. The Argentine Senate faced its first elections since 1995, and per an agreement crafted following the 1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution, all 72 seats would be renewed, and elected Senators would serve for two, four, or six-years in their first term afterwards. Senators, save for the City of Buenos Aires, had been elected by their respective provincial legislatures, and would now be popularly elected.

The change cost provincial parties, who lost four seats among them. The Justicialists, which had enjoyed a majority in the Senate since the return of democracy in 1983, gained one seat, and the Alliance, benefiting from the popular election of Senators despite the political climate, actually gained three. Growing disunity in the Alliance was reflected by UCR Senators elected on the UCR ticket itself in Chubut, Córdoba, Formosa, Santiago del Estero, and Tierra del Fuego.[3] [4]

Defeated in his presidential bid by the Alliance in 1999, Eduardo Duhalde benefited most from the shift back to the Peronists in 2001

The elections were seen as a rebuke for President de la Rúa and his handling of the economic crisis, which was now in its fourth year of recession. The Justicialists (Peronists), which gained 22 seats in the Lower House, benefited from being the leading party in opposition, as did their 1999 presidential nominee, Eduardo Duhalde, who was elected Senator for Buenos Aires Province, and theoretically emerged as the front-runner for the next presidential campaign in 2003.[5]

Despite the compulsory nature of the elections, a larger than usual percentage of citizens (25%) did not turn out to vote, and many resorted to a protest vote, with blank as well as spoiled or defaced ballots (the so-called voto bronca, "anger vote") amounting to nearly 4.5 million, or 24% of the total.[1][6] De la Rúa's term was ultimately cut short by his resignation amid the December 2001 riots.

External links

References

  1. 1 2 3 Nohlen, Dieter. Elections in the Americas. Oxford University Press, 2005.
  2. Georgetown University election data
  3. Clarín (October 15, 2001) (Spanish)
  4. BBC News. 18 October 2001. Peronists target Argentine austerity plan.
  5. Terra: Arrollador triunfo del PJ en todo el país (Spanish)
  6. BBC News. 15 October 2001. Poll rebuke for Argentine president.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 24, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.