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The Argentine provincial elections will elect the executive and legislative authorities of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and in 21 of the 23 provinces of Argentina, except (executive) Corrientes and Santiago del Estero; [1] elections in Tucumán (for a month) and San Juan (executive, for 1 and half months) were suspended by the Supreme Court. [2]
Elections
edit16 April
edit- Neuquén, Rolando Figueroa defeated the gubernatorial candidate of the long-governing Neuquén People's Movement, for the first time in 60 years, with 36.94% of Comunidad.[3]
- Río Negro, Alberto Weretilneck wins with 42.43%. Third consecutive electoral victory of Together We Are Río Negro.
5 May
edit- Jujuy, Carlos Sadir won with 49.59%. Third consecutive electoral victory for Together for Change.
- La Rioja, Ricardo Quintela is re-elected with 50.63%. Fourth consecutive electoral victory of Union for the Homeland and its predecessor parties.
- Misiones, Hugo Passalacqua won with 64.18%. Sixth consecutive electoral victory of the Front for the Renewal of Concord, it has not lost since its foundation.
14 May
edit- La Pampa, Sergio Ziliotto Is re-elected with 47.66%. Twelfth electoral victory of the Justicialist Party.
- Salta, Gustavo Sáenz is re-elected with 47.51% for the Salta Identity Party.
- San Juan (gubernatorial election suspended), the legislative election was won by the Union for the Homeland with 53.25%, obtained 9 of 17 legislators, Together for Change obtained 7 and Liberty Advances obtained 1.
- Tierra del Fuego, Gustavo Melella is re-elected with 65.63%. Fourth consecutive electoral victory of Union for the Homeland (counting predecessors) and allies.
- Tucumán (suspended)
11 June
edit- Corrientes, Legislative election. Victory of ECO+Vamos Corrientes with 68.06%, obtaining 11 legislators out of 15 and 4 senators out of 5.
- San Luis, Claudio Poggi obtained 53.10% and won by the total sum of Together for Change with 53.31%. Defeat of the supremacy of the Saá brothers (Adolfo 1983-2001 and Alberto 2003-2011 and 2015-2023).
- Tucumán, Osvaldo Jaldo won with 57.96%. Seventh consecutive electoral victory of Union for the Homeland (counting its predecessors).
25 June
edit- Córdoba, Martin Llaryora won with 45.20%. Seventh consecutive electoral victory of We Do for Córdoba (counting its predecessor Union for Córdoba).
- Formosa, Gildo Insfrán is re-elected for the eighth consecutive time with 69.97%.
2 July
edit- San Juan, Marcelo Orrego defeated the gubernatorial candidate of the governing Union for the Homeland, for the first time in 20 years, with 49.81%.[4]
30 July
edit- Chubut, Ignacio Torres defeats the candidate of Union for the Homeland. He won 35.71% to 34.11% and put an end to 20 years of Peronism (PJ-CST)
13 August
edit- Santa Cruz, Claudio Vidal defeated the gubernatorial candidates of the governing Union for the Homeland, for the first time in 40 years, with 46.5%.
10 September
edit- Santa Fe, Maximiliano Pullaro of Together for Change defeats the Union for the Homeland candidate with 58.40%. He became the first candidate to exceed one million votes in Santa Fe.
17 September
edit- Chaco, Leandro Zdero beats Jorge Capitanich with 46%. The UCR wins the province again, it has not happened since 2003.
24 September
edit- Mendoza, Alfredo Cornejo of Radical Civic Union defeated the Liberty Advances candidate, Omar de Marchi, with 39.50% of the vote.[5] He previously held the position from 2015 to 2019.
22 October
edit- Buenos Aires, Axel Kicillof of Union for the Homeland won re-election with 44.9% of the vote.[6]
- Buenos Aires City, Jorge Macri of Together for Change won against Union for the Homeland candidate, Leandro Santoro, with 49.6% of the vote. Despite provincial electoral rules requiring a runoff if a candidate does not win 50% of the vote, it was not held since Santaro dropped out.[7]
- Catamarca, Raúl Jalil of Union for the Homeland won re-election with 53.73% of the vote.[8]
- Entre Ríos, Rogelio Frigerio of Together for Change won against the Union for the Homeland candidate, Adrián Bahl with 41.7% of the vote. The UP-PJ have governed the province since 2003.[9]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Buenos Aires Times | Staggered voting creates intense 2023 electoral calendar nationwide". www.batimes.com.ar. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ "Página 12 | La Corte Suprema ordenó suspender las elecciones en Tucumán y San Juan". www.pagina12.com.ar. 9 May 2023. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
- ^ Institute, Baker. "A Political Earthquake In Argentina's Vaca Muerta: The 2023 Neuquén Gubernatorial Election". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-04-19.
- ^ "Juntos por el Cambio ganó San Juan: La victoria de Marcelo Orrego pone fin a 20 años de peronismo". 2 July 2023.
- ^ "Argentina: JxC candidate wins gubernatorial elections in Mendoza". MercoPress. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
- ^ Iricibar, Valen (2023-10-23). "Axel Kicillof clinches re-election as Buenos Aires governor with resounding win". Buenos Aires Herald. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
- ^ Herald, Buenos Aires (2023-10-24). "Jorge Macri becomes BA City mayor after Leandro Santoro drops out". Buenos Aires Herald. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
- ^ "El peronista Raúl Jalil logró la reelección como gobernador de Catamarca". LA NACION (in Spanish). 2023-10-23. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
- ^ Página|12 (2023-10-23). "Entre Ríos: El peronismo achicó la distancia pero Frigerio consiguió la gobernación | JxC se quedó con la provincia". PAGINA12 (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-10-28.
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