Avanza Libertad

(Redirected from Freedom Forward)

Avanza Libertad (English: Freedom Advances; AL), originally founded in 2019 as Frente Despertar (English: Awakening Front; FD), was an Argentine right-wing political coalition. Renamed in 2020, Avanza Libertad had legal status in the Buenos Aires Province.[23][24][25] Ideologically, it is libertarian conservative,[26][27][28] supportive of economic liberalism,[29][30][31] and critical of both Kirchnerism and Juntos por el Cambio.[32] Led by José Luis Espert,[33][34][35] it included centre-right and far-right factions,[20][21][22] with its more radical factions being compared to Spain's Vox.[36]

Freedom Advances
Avanza Libertad
AbbreviationAL
LeaderJosé Luis Espert[1]
Founded12 June 2019 (2019-06-12) (Frente Despertar)
7 December 2020 (2020-12-07) (Avanza Libertad)
Dissolved12 March 2024
Merged intoLa Libertad Avanza
NewspaperBuenos Aires
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[9][10][11][12] to far-right[13][14][A]
Coalition membersUnion of the Democratic Centre
Libertarian Party
Democratic Party
Autonomist Party
United Republicans
Colours  Blue
  Black
Members

^ A: It included centre-right and far-right factions.[20][21][22]

The coalition members included the Union of the Democratic Centre,[37] the Democratic Party of the City of Buenos Aires,[38] the Autonomist Party,[39] and the United Republicans.[40] Espert ran in the legislative elections with his own alliance of centre-right and right-wing parties. The presentation was made after the negotiations with the leaders of Juntos por el Cambio failed.[41] Previously, the alliance in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires also included Javier Milei, who later confirmed that he would compete separately from Espert.[42][43][44]

Its presidential candidate was the economist José Luis Espert, who announced on December 23 of 2018 his intention to participate in the presidential elections.[45][46]

History

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Frente Despertar

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Frente Despertar logo

On 11 June 2019, the coalition Frente Despertar was made official before the courts, which led to José Luis Espert, as candidate for president, and Luis Rosales, as candidate for vice president, in the 2019 Argentine general election.[47][48] Espert had declared his intention to participate in the presidential race on 23 December 2018.[49] This national alliance was made up of the Unite for Freedom and Dignity party, the Union of the Democratic Centre (UCEDE) except in the City of Buenos Aires, and some sectors of the Libertarian Party.[50] In the beginning, the alliance had the support of Alberto Asseff, president of the UNIR Constitutional Nationalist Party; after a sudden change, he decided to leave the front and support Juntos por el Cambio.[51] This fact caused that the ex alliance was almost terminated by Assef's sudden change; due to the signing of the UNITE seal, he was able to participate in the elections a few days later.[52]

Espert launched his electoral campaign at the Héctor Etchart stadium of the Ferro Carril Oeste club, in the Buenos Aires neighborhood of Caballito, where he was accompanied by his main candidates. There he asked to vote "neither with fear nor anger" and abandon "the crack speech".[53]

The alliance was about to be disbanded because Alberto Asseff's party, UNIR Constitutional Nationalist Party (the only party in the alliance that met the requirements to nominate a presidential candidate), stopped supporting the front. But a few days later, UNITE backed Espert's candidacy[54] and ended up participating in the elections.

In the primary elections, the electoral coalition obtained 2.16% of the votes, a total of 550,593 votes.[55] Having exceeded 1.5% of the required votes, they were able to stand in the general elections. In the October elections they obtained a total of 394,206 votes, 1.47% of the votes; being, in this way, last in front of five other candidates.[56]

Following doubts related to the financing of the 2019 Argentine presidential election campaign of the Frente Despertar and the links with the drug trafficking detainee Federico "Fred" Machado,[57] Milei was denounced along with José Luis Espert; Milei did not take part to the 2019 campaign.[58] Luis Rosales, Jimena Aristizabal, and Nazareno Etchepare also entered the complaint before the Federal Criminal and Correctional Court No. 8, for the crimes of concealment and illicit association.[59][60]

Avanza Libertad

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In September 2020, during a live broadcast with Espert, the economist Javier Milei confirmed that he would be a candidate for deputy for the City of Buenos Aires, on behalf of the Frente Despertar.[61] On 23 October 2020, the lawyer, Francisco Oneto also made the decision to support the space by adhering to its electoral proposals.[62]

On 10 March 2021, a meeting was held between the main referents of the Autonomist Party, the Democratic Party, the UCEDE, United Republicans, the Republican Liberal Party, and Valores para mi País for the formation of an electoral coalition called as Frente Vamos, whose objective was to compete in the 2021 Argentine legislative election.[63] Soon after, José Antonio Romero Feris, president of the Autonomist Party, announced that he would not participate in any electoral alliance that "divides the opposition political arc".[64]

In June 2021, Espert proposed a broad opposition front against the government of Axel Kicillof in the province of Buenos Aires for the 2021 legislative election, and that it would include anti-Kirchnerist sectors like Juntos por el Cambio.[65][66]

2021 legislative election

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On 14 July 2021, the closing day for the presentation of alliances for the legislative elections of 2021, the Avanza Libertad coalition was made official with parties from the Argentine political centre-right sector in the province of Buenos Aires. The UCEDE, the Democratic Party, and the Autonomist Party took part in the coalition, in addition to political groups in the province, such as United Republicans and the Republican Libertarian Movement.[67]

Electoral platform

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The electoral platform of Avanza Libertad has fourteen proposals.[68] They were announced in conjunction with Espert's candidacy and published on the coalition's website, where they were developed more broadly.[69]

  1. Eliminate or reduce to a very low and uniform minimum import tariffs.
  2. Sign free trade agreements with all regions or countries that wish to access the local market.
  3. Eliminate export taxes (retentions).
  4. Reduce public spending.
  5. Focus attention on the most vulnerable sectors.
  6. Transform social plans into in-kind disbursements (community kitchens, health and education plans, etc.).
  7. Lower the tax burden, including the elimination of certain taxes and the reduction of others.
  8. Keep fiscal accounts balanced.
  9. Reduce the expenses of the political apparatus.
  10. End the partnership and propose a political regionalization of the provinces in order to obtain jurisdictions that are self-financing.
  11. Eliminate all industrial and regional promotion regimes.
  12. Reforms within syndicalism and collective bargaining agreements.
  13. Reform the educational system.
  14. Reform the Penal Code and Criminal Procedure of the Nation, imposing sentences of effective compliance and eliminating constitutional guarantees that favor criminals.

Controversies

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Various journalistic media and referents of Argentine economic liberalism criticized the alleged financing by Kirchnerism of the 2019 Argentine general election campaign of the Despertar Front for which its campaign manager, the former member of the Civic Coalition ARI, Nazareno Etchepare, would have resigned. Luis Rosales forcefully denied all the accusations.[70][71][72] In turn, an alleged collaboration by Kirchnerism in the control of the ballots during the elections came to light and so that the front could print its ballots in the province of Buenos Aires glued to its local candidates.[73]

In August 2020, the journalist Eduardo Feinmann revived these accusations on his television program and social networks, stating that Espert's candidacy was promoted by the former president and political shipowner Eduardo Duhalde,[74][75] that it was financed by Eduardo de Pedro and mayors of the suburbs and later by the head of government Horacio Rodríguez Larreta. This last statement was confirmed by the former first candidate for Buenos Aires legislator linked to the convicted former minister Julio de Vido,[76] Gonzalo Díaz Córdoba,[77] who was appointed in 2020 by the Buenos Aires government as trustee of the Puerto Madero Corporation.[78][79][80] The economist Diego Giacomini, who accompanied Espert during the first part of his 2019 campaign, and the musician Emmanuel Danann, also confirmed the previous accusations,[81] indicating that Espert would have been promoted by Eduardo Duhalde and Carlos Menem to subtract votes from Mauricio Macri's camp and allow the Frente de Todos to reach the ballot.[82][83]

The Despertar Front was also accused of having rented the parties presided over by Alberto Assef (UNIR) and José Bonacci (UNITE) in exchange for money.[84][70] Although the financing reports of the Frente Despertar campaign did not declare private contributions, it is suspected that the campaign was financed by Federico "Fred" Machado, a businessman arrested for crimes of illicit association for the manufacture and distribution of cocaine, money laundering, and fraud.[85][86][87] It was also argued that the campaign received contributions from the governor of the province of Formosa, Gildo Insfrán, and the late banker Jorge Horacio Brito, thanks to the link between Sergio Massa and Daniel Ivoskus.[88][89] Finally, it was said that Daniel Vila, president of Grupo América, supported Espert's candidacy.[90][91] As a result of the doubts related to the financing of the presidential campaign of the ex-Frente Despertar in 2019 and the ties with Machado, Espert was denounced along with Rosales, Milei, Jimena Aristizabal, and Nazareno Etchepare, before the Federal Criminal and Correctional Court No. 8, for the crimes of concealment and illicit association.[92][93]

Member parties

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Party President Ideology Position
Union of the Democratic Centre Hugo Bontempo Classical liberalism Right-wing
Democratic Party of the City of Buenos Aires (left in 2022) Carlos Nestor Onteiro (interventor)[94] Conservative liberalism Centre-right
Libertarian Party (left in 2021) Lucas Gazzotti Libertarian conservatism Right-wing
Autonomist Party José Romero Feris Autonomism Centre-right
United Republicans Sebastián "Vasco" Pascual Liberalism Right-wing
Republican Libertarian Movement Luciano Silva Liberalism Centre-right
Popular Dignity Ernesto Raúl Habra Neo-Nazism[95] Far-right
Alternative Plural Encounter Andrés Resa Federal Peronism[96] Right-wing

Electoral results

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Presidential elections

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Year Ticket Primary First round Result Notes
President Vice President Votes % Votes % Position
2019 José Luis Espert Luis Rosales 550.593
394,206
6th

National Congress elections

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Chamber of Deputies

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Year Votes % Seats won Total seats
2019 113,812
0.44%
0 / 130
0 / 257

Senate

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Year Votes % Seats won Total seats
2019 38,970
0.69%
0 / 24
0 / 72

National Deputies for the Province of Buenos Aires

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Year Primary General Seats Position
Votes % Votes % Obtained Total
2021 417.858
656.487
2 / 35
2 / 70

Deputies of the Province of Buenos Aires

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Year Votes % Seats Position
Obtained Total
2021 288.536
3 / 46
3 / 92
3th

Senate of the Province of Buenos Aires

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Year Votes % Seats Position
Obtained Total
2021 334.228
0 / 23
0 / 46
3th

See also

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References

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