Difference between revisions of "Argentina in 2009"

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(Created page with "'''Argentina in 2009''' '''Area:''' 2,780,400 sq km (1,073,520 sq mi)<br> '''Population''' (2013 est.): 41,348,000<br> '''Capital:''' Buenos Aires<br> '''Head of ...")
 
 
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'''[[Argentina]] in 2009'''
'''[[Argentina]] in 2009'''


'''Area:''' 2,780,400 sq km (1,073,520 sq mi)<br>
'''Area:''' 2,780,403 sq km (1,073,520 sq mi)<br>
'''Population'''     (2013 est.): 41,348,000<br>
'''Population'''   (2009 est.): 40,276,000<br>
'''Capital:'''   Buenos Aires<br>
'''Capital:''' Buenos Aires<br>
'''Head of state and government:''' President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner<br>
'''Head of state:''' President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner<br>


[[File:Buenos_Aires_protests.jpg]]<br>
Argentine Pres. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner began 2009 with low public approval ratings, rising dissent within her governing Peronist movement, and serious economic difficulties stemming from a combination of the global recession and her government’s mismanagement of economic policy. In the face of this growing crisis, in March Fernández de Kirchner unexpectedly reformed the electoral law in order to set June 28 as the date for midterm congressional elections (previously scheduled for October) in which one-half of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies (127 of 257) and one-third of the seats in the Senate (24 of 72) were to be elected.
'''Buenos Aires protests'''<br>
''Demonstrators bang pots in front of the obelisk in Buenos Aires on April 18, 2013, as part of widespread protests against high inflation, corruption, crime, and other problems that continued to plague Argentina.''<br>


The marquee battle on June 28 was in the province of Buenos Aires. Fernández de Kirchner’s spouse, former president Néstor Kirchner (who after leaving office in 2007 continued to be the country’s de facto political leader), squared off against dissident Peronist Francisco de Narváez as well as a non-Peronist opposition alliance led by Margarita Stolbizer. The Chamber list headed by Kirchner utilized copious amounts of government resources to support its campaign. The independently wealthy de Narváez matched Kirchner’s campaign spending to a considerable extent, while Stolbizer’s impoverished campaign struggled to gain traction among voters.


In 2013 Pres. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s hopes of reforming Argentina’s constitution to allow her to seek a third term in 2015 were dashed. Rampant inflation and crime combined with dissatisfaction with Fernández de Kirchner’s authoritarian governing style to hand the president a severe setback in midterm congressional elections, leaving her far short of the two-thirds majorities of both houses of the National Congress required to call a constitutional convention.
On June 28 the Kirchners suffered a severe rebuke at the polls. In the province of Buenos Aires, the government’s list, headed by Néstor Kirchner, finished second to that of de Narváez (32% to 35%). In the federal capital district, the Kirchners’ list placed fourth (12% of the vote), while in Santa Fe and Córdoba, the country’s two other large provinces, the Kirchners’ Chamber lists came in third (10%) and fourth (9%), respectively, behind dissident Peronist lists. These four districts jointly accounted for 62% of the population, and the Kirchners failed to achieve victory in a single one.


On October 27 elections were held to renew one-half of the Chamber of Deputies and one-third of the Senate. Fernández de Kirchner’s Front for Victory (FPV) and its allies were opposed by a patchwork of different opposition parties and alliances across Argentina’s 23 provinces and in its autonomous Federal District. In some districts the principal opposition was provided by politicians who, like the president, belonged to the Peronist movement, whereas in others the main challengers were members of non-Peronist parties such as the country’s traditional counterweight to Peronism, the Radical Civic Union (UCR). Three weeks prior to the election, Fernández de Kirchner underwent surgery to remove a blood clot from her brain. She was placed on a strict regimen that required 30 days of bed rest, and her infirmity prevented her from actively participating in the home stretch of the FPV’s campaign.
Overall, government supporters won 47 and 8 seats in the Chamber and Senate, respectively. When the renewed Chamber and Senate were constituted on December 10, the Kirchners possessed a Chamber delegation of only 87 members (plus approximately 20 allies) and a Senate delegation of 32 members (plus approximately 5 allies). The days in which the Kirchners could rely on a disciplined legislative majority to obediently approve their legislative initiatives were clearly in the past.


The most visible and important election took place in the pivotal Buenos Aires province, where 39% of Argentines resided. The FPV ticket was headed by the president’s handpicked candidate, Martín Insaurralde, mayor of the Buenos Aires suburb of Lomas de Zamora. Insaurralde’s main rival was Sergio Massa, Fernández de Kirchner’s former chief of cabinet ministers and mayor of suburban Tigre. Massa and his dissident-Peronist Renewal Front list handily defeated Insaurralde and the FPV 44% to 32%. Massa’s decisive victory made him an instant front-runner for the 2015 presidential race.
While many hoped that the Kirchners’ electoral defeat would lead them to adopt a more consensual governance style, to the contrary the Kirchners ratcheted up their level of conflict and antagonism with a host of groups, including the principal agricultural organizations, the major media companies, the non-Peronist opposition, and dissident Peronists. In addition, immediately following the election, Health Minister Graciela Ocaña resigned, and several Cabinet moderates, in particular Cabinet Chief Sergio Massa, were replaced.


The FPV suffered similar defeats in Chamber contests in the country’s four other most populous districts, which together accounted for 28% of Argentina’s population. In the Federal District the FPV placed third with 22% of the vote, behind both Mayor Mauricio Macri’s Federal Proposal (35%) and the non-Peronist UNEN alliance (32%). In Córdoba the FPV ran a distant third, its 15% of the vote easily eclipsed by the dissident-Peronist Union for Cordoba, led by Gov. José Manuel de la Sota (27%), and the UCR (23%). In Santa Fe the FPV finished third with 23%, far behind the non-Peronist Progressive Front (42%), which had governed the province since 2007. Finally, in Mendoza the FPV was dispatched 48% to 27% by the UCR list of Julio Cobos, the vice president during Fernández de Kirchner’s first term. The FPV even lost badly in the president’s home province, Santa Cruz.
After experiencing six straight years of robust economic growth, in 2009 the Argentine economy shrank by 3%. While the government’s continued intervention of the national statistics agency and fraudulent manipulation of economic indicators rendered the official inflation rate unreliable, private estimates suggested that inflation in 2009 was a comparatively high 15%.
 
In all, the FPV and its allies won only one-third of the popular vote, 47 of 127 contested Chamber seats, and 14 of 24 Senate seats in play. Thus, Fernández de Kirchner began her final two years in office with bare majorities in both the Senate (39 of 72 seats) and the Chamber (132 of 257 seats).
 
During 2013 Argentina continued to suffer from high inflation, estimated at between 25% and 30%. Meanwhile, a growing shortage of U.S. dollars in the government coffers resulted in increasingly restrictive currency and import controls as the year progressed. In November Fernández de Kirchner reshuffled her cabinet, but she seemed determined to maintain the same economic strategy.


Mark P. Jones
Mark P. Jones

Latest revision as of 21:45, 18 October 2015

Argentina in 2009

Area: 2,780,403 sq km (1,073,520 sq mi)
Population (2009 est.): 40,276,000
Capital: Buenos Aires
Head of state: President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner

Argentine Pres. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner began 2009 with low public approval ratings, rising dissent within her governing Peronist movement, and serious economic difficulties stemming from a combination of the global recession and her government’s mismanagement of economic policy. In the face of this growing crisis, in March Fernández de Kirchner unexpectedly reformed the electoral law in order to set June 28 as the date for midterm congressional elections (previously scheduled for October) in which one-half of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies (127 of 257) and one-third of the seats in the Senate (24 of 72) were to be elected.

The marquee battle on June 28 was in the province of Buenos Aires. Fernández de Kirchner’s spouse, former president Néstor Kirchner (who after leaving office in 2007 continued to be the country’s de facto political leader), squared off against dissident Peronist Francisco de Narváez as well as a non-Peronist opposition alliance led by Margarita Stolbizer. The Chamber list headed by Kirchner utilized copious amounts of government resources to support its campaign. The independently wealthy de Narváez matched Kirchner’s campaign spending to a considerable extent, while Stolbizer’s impoverished campaign struggled to gain traction among voters.

On June 28 the Kirchners suffered a severe rebuke at the polls. In the province of Buenos Aires, the government’s list, headed by Néstor Kirchner, finished second to that of de Narváez (32% to 35%). In the federal capital district, the Kirchners’ list placed fourth (12% of the vote), while in Santa Fe and Córdoba, the country’s two other large provinces, the Kirchners’ Chamber lists came in third (10%) and fourth (9%), respectively, behind dissident Peronist lists. These four districts jointly accounted for 62% of the population, and the Kirchners failed to achieve victory in a single one.

Overall, government supporters won 47 and 8 seats in the Chamber and Senate, respectively. When the renewed Chamber and Senate were constituted on December 10, the Kirchners possessed a Chamber delegation of only 87 members (plus approximately 20 allies) and a Senate delegation of 32 members (plus approximately 5 allies). The days in which the Kirchners could rely on a disciplined legislative majority to obediently approve their legislative initiatives were clearly in the past.

While many hoped that the Kirchners’ electoral defeat would lead them to adopt a more consensual governance style, to the contrary the Kirchners ratcheted up their level of conflict and antagonism with a host of groups, including the principal agricultural organizations, the major media companies, the non-Peronist opposition, and dissident Peronists. In addition, immediately following the election, Health Minister Graciela Ocaña resigned, and several Cabinet moderates, in particular Cabinet Chief Sergio Massa, were replaced.

After experiencing six straight years of robust economic growth, in 2009 the Argentine economy shrank by 3%. While the government’s continued intervention of the national statistics agency and fraudulent manipulation of economic indicators rendered the official inflation rate unreliable, private estimates suggested that inflation in 2009 was a comparatively high 15%.

Mark P. Jones