Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1931 Argentine general election

none


none

FieldValue
countryArgentina
module{{Infobox election
embedyes
election_namePresidential election
typepresidential
votes_for_election376 members of the Electoral College
needed_votes189
registered2,116,552
turnout73.80%
previous_election1928 Argentine general election
previous_year1928
next_election1937 Argentine presidential election
next_year1937
election_date8 November 1931
image1Agustin Pedro Justo en 1936 (cropped).jpg
nominee1Agustín P. Justo
party1Antipersonalist Radical Civic Union
alliance1Concordancia (Argentina)
running_mate1
electoral_vote1237
popular_vote1864,394
percentage161.44%
image2LisandroDeLaTorre.jpg
nominee2Lisandro de la Torre
party2PDP
color2F69A69
alliance2
running_mate2Nicolás Repetto
electoral_vote2124
popular_vote2487,584
percentage234.66%
map_imageElecciones presidenciales de Argentina de 1931.svg
map_size200px
map_captionResults by province
titlePresident
before_electionJosé F. Uriburu
before_partyNationalist Liberation Alliance
after_electionAgustín P. Justo
after_partyPDN
module{{Infobox legislative election
embedyes
first_electionyes
election_nameChamber of Deputies
previous_election1930
next_election1934
election_date8 November 1931
seats_for_electionAll 158 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
majority_seats80
turnout73.81%
noleaderyes
heading1Chamber of Deputies
party1Concordancia (Argentina)
percentage160.05
seats195
color2
party2
percentage234.25
seats257
color3#641C34
party3
percentage33.28
seats36
mapElecciones legislativas de Argentina de 1931 - Resultados por distrito.svg
map_captionResults by province

General elections were held in Argentina 8 November 1931.

Background

Following months of protest triggered in part by the onset of the Great Depression, a quiet coup d'état deposed the aging Hipólito Yrigoyen in September 1930. His country's first leader elected via secret male universal suffrage, Yrigoyen had strained alliances within his own centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR) through frequent interventions against willful governors and had set business powerhouses such as Standard Oil against him through his support of YPF, the state oil concern founded in 1922. Staging its first coup since 1861, the Argentine military, then dominated by conservative, rural interests, called on José Félix Uriburu, a retired general and member of the Supreme War Council, to assume the role of Provisional President. Uriburu, the nephew of former President José Evaristo Uriburu, had no taste for politics and was in ailing health.

He nevertheless set down an ambitious agenda, entrusting his Interior Minister, Matías Sánchez Sorondo, to replace the 1912 Sáenz Peña Law (which provided for universal male suffrage and the secret ballot) with one promoting a single, ruling party not unlike the one that kept the landowner-oriented National Autonomist Party (PAN) in power from 1874 to 1916. Aligning themselves behind the relatively moderate National Democratic Party, conservatives were defeated in gubernatorial polls in the paramount Province of Buenos Aires in April 1931. The results not only raised hopes for the centrist, urban-oriented UCR, it also persuaded Uriburu that Sánchez Sorondo's "electoral reform" would not keep conservatives in power, in and of itself.

The UCR turned to Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear for leadership ahead of the November 1931 elections. The scion of one of Argentina's traditional landed families and President from 1922 to 1928, Alvear's alliance with Yrigoyen soured as he challenged the latter's personality cult (hence his creation of a splinter, "Antipersonalist" UCR). The seasoned Alvear, however, took care to assuage the still-popular Yrigoyen's objections by naming former Salta Province Governor Adolfo Güemes (a staunch Yrigoyen supporter) as his running mate.

Facing a recovered and nearly-unified UCR, President Uriburu dispensed with his previous pledge to restore constitutional order and annulled the Buenos Aires Province elections. He also promoted the Argentine Civic Legion, an armed fascist organization entrusted to intimidate the opposition. Alvear's establishment of a Renewal Junta helped lead to a violent July 20 clash with Uriburu's forces in Corrientes Province, which gave the President the pretext for ordering Alvear's deportation, a few days later. Deprived of their candidate, the UCR boycotted the 1931 election, though party committees in a number of provinces participated in the November polls.

The support of UCR Senator Leopoldo Melo (the leader of the anti-Yrigoyen faction of the party) and Uriburu for retired General Agustín Justo as candidate resulted in the Concordance. This new, conservative alliance heeded Uriburu's sage advice during their nominating convention, sidestepping imposing landowners in favor of Justo, who had been President Alvear's War Minister in the 1920s. They picked former Córdoba Governor Julio Roca as his running mate; Roca, the son of the late PAN leader, Julio A. Roca, had led the Democratic Party of Córdoba.

A National Democratic Party ballot.

The Democratic Progressive Party (PDP), known for its anti-corruption platform, nominated Senator Lisandro de la Torre, who also earned the endorsement of the Socialist Party of Argentina, a party in search of leadership following the passing of Juan B. Justo, in 1928. The alliance alienated conservatives in the PDP, however, who instead endorsed the aging Francisco A. Barroetaveña, a former Senator who ran on a UCR ticket limited to his Entre Ríos Province. Barroetaveña, who helped found the UCR in 1890, broke with Yrigoyen during the 1920s and hoped to rally the exiled Alvear's supporters behind him.

Ultimately, voter intimidation and widespread irregularities helped give the National Democratic-led Concordance a sizable victory on election night. The electoral college, however, which counted the conservatives' ad hoc Lista Única (Unified List) separately, was far more closely divided: 135 for Justo, 124 for de la Torre, and 117 for the numerous UCR tickets who defied Alvear's boycott (including Barroetaveña's). As most of these splinter UCR tickets were led by conservative figures opposed to the muck-raking Senator de la Torre, their pledge of most of their 117 electors handed Justo the Presidency.

Candidates

  • Concordance (conservative): General Agustín Justo of Entre Ríos Province
  • Socialist-Democratic Progressive alliance (reformist): Former Deputy Lisandro de la Torre of the city of Buenos Aires
  • Radical Civic Union (unofficial, center-right ticket): Former Deputy Francisco A. Barroetaveña of Entre Ríos Province File:AGUSTIN P JUSTO AÑO 1926.JPG|Justo File:Lisandro de la Torre 001.jpg|de la Torre File:Francisco Barroetaveña.jpg|Barroetaveña

Results

President

Chamber of Deputies

Unión Cívica Radical Antipersonalista|lt=UCRA}}–PSI|votes10=3107|st1t10=0|st2t10=0|st3t10=0

Results by province

ProvinceConcordanceCivic AllianceOthersVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsBuenos AiresBuenos Aires CityCatamarcaCórdobaCorrientesEntre RíosJujuyLa RiojaMendozaSaltaSan JuanSan LuisSanta FeSantiago del EsteroTucumánTotal823,66260.0595469,81834.255778,2025.706
229,24864.1928123,27234.52144,6021.290
90,87433.1810171,54562.632211,4944.200
19,4441002
97,33380.341019,42116.0354,4003.630
54,66193.8273,5986.180
31,30335.18312,70414.28044,98250.556
11,41481.8822,52618.120
13,53589.7521,54610.250
29,06475.5649,40224.442
22,31685.6833,72914.320
29,48987.6434,15912.360
12,15469.8423,12817.9712,12112.190
80,82243.43699,60353.52135,6683.050
51,82386.3763,2415.4004,9358.230
50,18280.77711,94419.230

References

References

  1. [http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/radicales/Yrigoyen2/index.html ''Todo Argentina: Yrigoyen''] {{in lang. es
  2. [http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/decadainf/uriburu/index.html ''Todo Argentina: Uriburu''] {{in lang. es
  3. [http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/hist_elec/fraude_patriotico.htm ''Todo Argentina: Fraude Patriotico''] {{in lang. es
  4. Rock, David. ''Authoritarian Argentina.'' University of California Press, 1993.
  5. Cantón, Darío. (1968). "Materiales para el estudio de la sociología política en la Argentina". Centro de Investigaciones Sociales - [[Torcuato di Tella Institute]].
  6. (December 2008). "Historia Electoral Argentina (1912-2007)". Ministry of Interior - Subsecretaría de Asuntos Políticos y Electorales.
  7. (1946). "Las Fuerzas Armadas restituyen el imperio de la soberanía popular: Las elecciones generales de 1946". Imprenta de la Cámara de Diputados.
  8. (12 December 1931). "Con abrumador triunfo para la candidatura del General Justo terminó el escrutinio". El Orden.
  9. (26 November 1931). "Los antipersonalistas han ganado la elección en La Rioja, ayer". El Orden.
  10. (20 November 1931). "Tucumán: Se llega al final de la tarea". El Orden.
  11. (17 November 1931). "En la provincia de Catamarca terminó el escrutinio con un abrumador triunfo para Justo". Diario Santa Fe.
  12. (2 December 1931). "Terminó el escrutinio en Córdoba, Santiago del Estero y Capital Federal". Diario Santa Fe.
  13. (29 November 1931). "Con el triunfo del Partido Demócrata Nacional terminó ayer el escrutinio en Salta". Diario Santa Fe.
  14. (15 November 1931). "La fórmula Justo-Matienzo se impuso ampliamente en la provincia de San Juan". Diario Santa Fe.
  15. (20 November 1931). "Escrutinio en Corrientes". El Litoral.
  16. (28 November 1931). "En la provincia de Entre Ríos fue terminado hoy el escrutinio de los comicios". El Litoral.
  17. (29 November 1931). "Las cifras oficiales de Mendoza". El Litoral.
  18. (25 November 1931). "En San Luis, Mendoza, La Rioja y Sgo. del Estero prosiguen los escrutinios". El Litoral.
  19. (3 March 1934). "Elecciones de 1931". El Litoral.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1931 Argentine general election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report