1991 Argentine legislative election

The Argentine legislative elections of 1991 were held on four dates, 11 August, 8 September, 27 October and 1 December, though most polls took place on 8 September. Voters chose their legislators and governors and, with a turnout of 80%.

1991 Argentine legislative election
Argentina
← 1989 11 August 1991 to 1 December 1991 1993 →

130 of 257 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout80.41%
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Chamber of Deputies
Justicialist Party

40.81% 63 −4
Radical Civic Union

28.86% 43 +1
Union of the Democratic Centre

6.24% 5 −2
Socialist - Intransigent - Humanist

5.63% 3 +3
Movement for Dignity and Independence

3.45% 3 +3
Independent Federalist Confederation

3.12% 3 0
Others

11.85% 10 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by province

Background

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Amid sudden hyperinflation and riots, Governor Carlos Menem exhorted voters in May 1989 that "following me will not disappoint you!" Elected in a landslide, his administration had a rocky start marked by an early stabilization plan that had failed by December and a series of corruption scandals surrounding his freewheeling in-laws. After a tentative stability had been achieved by the end of 1990, a new currency crisis in January 1991 led President Menem to transfer his Foreign Minister, Domingo Cavallo, to the Economics Ministry. Cavallo, an unorthodox economist remembered for having rescinded the Central Bank's hated Circular 1050 and its crushing interest rate surcharges during a stint as Central Bank President in 1982, was entrusted to bring stability to Argentina's shredded currency, the austral, and to begin the repair of Argentina's nearly non-existent relations with its foreign creditors (owed arrears on billions of debt since 1988) and the country's own sizable upper class (who held well over US$50 billion in assets abroad).[1][2]

Backed partly by a then-record US$8 billion trade surplus in 1990 and partly by the assumption that Menem's free-market policies would encourage a wave of foreign direct investment, Cavallo's Convertibility Plan tied the Argentine currency to the U.S. dollar, leading a sharp drop in local interest rates and to a recovery in local deposits, lending and the depressed economy soon after the plan's March 27, 1991, introduction. Currency stability led particularly to lower inflation, which fell from 1,350% in 1990 to 84% in 1991; prices rose 1.3% in the month of August (the best showing since 1974) and the hitherto unpopular Menem saw his approval soar. Menem's turn against time-honored Justicialist Party tenets such as the support of labor laws and the encouragement of State enterprises (policies defined in the 1940s by the party's very founder, Juan Perón), led some in his party to run on splinter Peronist tickets, which did well - but came far from seriously challenging the official party ticket.[3]

Menem's contentious divorce from his wife of 25 years, Zulema Yoma, reports of massive corruption surrounding his in-laws and the resignation under indictment of his Public Works Minister and privatizations guru, Roberto Dromi, could not overshadow the improving economic climate among the electorate at large. The Justicialist Party's victory in the 1991 mid-term elections was not so much absolute as it was relative: the party made no inroads into their large majorities in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies or among the nation's governors; indeed, they lost 3 of their 17 governors elected in 1987. They did, however, increase their difference over the UCR, whose leader, former President Raúl Alfonsín, resigned amid scorn over the shadow his chaotic 1983-89 tenure seemed to cast over these polls. The UCR, in two upsets, wrested governorships in Catamarca and Chubut Provinces, however. The paramount Buenos Aires Province gave Vice-President Eduardo Duhalde a 2-to-1 victory over the UCR's gray eminence, former Economy Minister Juan Carlos Pugliese; in the Greater Buenos Aires area, on the other hand, one-time mutineer Col. Aldo Rico was able to translate voters' anger in the over rising illegal immigration and crime rates into an unexpected 3 seats in Congress for his far-right MODIN. These elections helped consolidate the scandal-plagued Menem's tenuous grasp on the presidency, making them (in his words) "the day Menemism was born."[2][4]

Results

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Party Votes % Seats won Total seats
Justicialist Party (PJ) 6,418,226 40.81 63 130
Radical Civic Union (UCR) 4,539,967 28.86 43 85
Union of the Democratic Centre (UCEDE) 981,611 6.24 5 12
Socialist Party - Intransigent Party - Humanist Party 885,057 5.63 3 3
Movement for Dignity and Independence (MODIN) 543,375 3.45 3 3
Independent Federalist Confederation (CFI) 490,099 3.12 3 6
United Left (IU) 341,864 2.17 1
Republican Force (FR) 282,478 1.80 2 4
Autonomist - Liberal - Democratic Progressive 167,276 1.06 2 3
Popular Action for Liberation 138,529 0.88
Democratic Progressive Party (PDP) 133,188 0.85 1 2
Democratic Party of Mendoza (PD) 100,101 0.64 1
Neuquén People's Movement (MPN) 80,648 0.51 1 2
Renewal Crusade (CR) 77,425 0.49 1 2
Blockist Alliance 74,603 0.47 1 1
Workers' Party (PO) 59,731 0.38
Christian Democratic Party (PDC) 58,830 0.37
Labor and People's Party (PTP) 60,232 0.38
Authentic Formosa Party 30,351 0.19
Integration and Development Movement (MID) 26,552 0.17
Independent Call 24,089 0.15
Neighborhood Party 23,075 0.15
Constitutional Nationalist Party (PNC) 22,073 0.14
Popular Union (UP) 17,947 0.11
Corrientes Action 14,089 0.09
Renewal Party of the Province 13,362 0.08
Chubut Action Party (PACH) 11,572 0.07
Río Negro Provincial Party (PPR) 11,444 0.07
Popular Action Movement 11,163 0.07
Fueguino People's Movement (MOPOF) 9,704 0.06 2 2
Patriotic Liberation Movement 7,211 0.05
Democratic Party of Buenos Aires City 6,375 0.04
Santa Cruz Popular Movement 6,270 0.04
Three Flags Renewal Party 6,059 0.04
Call for the Reunion 4,654 0.03
Buenos Aires Popular Movement 4,237 0.03
Democratic Movement of Participation 4,178 0.03
Republican Social Party 3,919 0.02
Labor Party of Tucumán 3,651 0.02
Center Party 3,587 0.02
White Party 3,191 0.02
Popular Action 2,940 0.02
Social Justice 2,868 0.02
Formosa Action - Formosa Integrative Force 2,596 0.02
Middle Generation Party 2,493 0.02
Provincial Action Front (FAP) 2,158 0.01
Liberal Democratic Party (PDL) 2,019 0.01
Labor and Solidarity Front 1,776 0.01
La Pampa Federalist Movement (MOFEPA) 1,572 0.01
Free Homeland 1,285 0.01
Autonomist Party 1,121 0.01
Provincial Popular Movement 1,061 0.01
Change and Justice 952 0.01
Provincial Defense - White Flag (DP-BB) 656 0.00
Independence Party 630 0.00
Loyalty and Social Justice 605 0.00
Open Call for the Bases 469 0.00
Three Flags Party 454 0.00
People's Democracy - Social Front 149 0.00
Nationalist Movement 104 0.00
Total 15,728,688 100 130 257
Positive votes 15,728,688 93.97
Blank votes 834,407 4.98
Invalid votes 127,323 0.76
Tally sheet differences 48,085 0.29
Total votes 16,738,503 100
Registered voters/turnout 20,817,039 80.41
Sources:[5][6]

References

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  1. ^ National Geographic Magazine. August 1986.
  2. ^ a b Todo Argentina: Carlos Menem's first term (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Todo Argentina: 1991 (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Notícias. 14 September 1991.
  5. ^ "Elecciones Nacionales ESCRUTINIO DEFINITIVO 1991" (PDF). Ministry of the Interior. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2018.
  6. ^ "Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013". Dirección Nacional Electoral. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022.