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1965 Argentine legislative election

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FieldValue
countryArgentina
previous_election1963
next_election1973
seats_for_election99 of the 192 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
turnout83.72%
election_date14 March 1965
noleaderyes
party1Popular Union
percentage131.12
last_election13
seats135
party2
percentage229.72
last_election237
seats234
party3
percentage37.38
last_election34
seats38
party4Integration and Development Movement
percentage46.01
last_election4New
seats45
party5Intransigent Radical Civic Union
percentage54.52
last_election522
seats51
party6Democratic Progressive Party
percentage63.21
last_election66
seats63
party7Argentine Socialist Party
percentage72.06
last_election73
seats71
party8Three Flags Party
percentage81.65
last_election81
seats82
party9Provincial Action
percentage91.17
last_election9New
seats92
party10Mendoza Popular Action
percentage101.09
last_election10New
seats101
party11
percentage110.84
last_election111
seats112
party12White Party
percentage120.51
last_election12-2
seats121
party13San Luis Popular Action
percentage130.26
last_election131
seats131
party14Neuquén People's Movement
percentage140.24
last_election142
seats142
party15National Unity Party
percentage150.04
last_election15New
seats151
mapElecciones legislativas de Argentina de 1965 - Resultados por distrito.svg
map_captionResults by province

Legislative elections were held in Argentina on 14 March 1965. Voters chose their legislators with a turnout of 84%.

Background

The exiled populist leader, Juan Perón, continued to set the electoral agenda. The economy had recovered vigorously from the 1962-63 recession, and this only seemed to deprive voters and the media of a distraction away from speculation as to what steps Perón might take next to return to Argentina. This issue was highlighted by his failed December 1964 attempt to arrive in Buenos Aires - thwarted almost by accident. His still-sizable Peronist base, in turn, were divided between those who felt his return was critical to their political future, and those who sought alternatives. One of the most successful projects to these ends was the Popular Union (UP), a party founded within days of Perón's violent, September 1955 overthrow. Its founder, Juan Atilio Bramuglia, had been a close advisor of Perón's since the birth of the movement, in 1945. Bramuglia had been unable, however, to obtain support for the idea from Perón himself, who favored electoral alliances. Bramuglia died in 1962; but the failure of one such alliance in 1963 provided Popular Union supporters with their first realistic chance to represent the aging leader.

The president, Dr. Arturo Illia, faced immediate pressure from the military and other anti-peronists to bar the Popular Union from fielding any candidates; but the moderate Illia refused. The adoption of the UP mantle by Steelworkers' leader Augusto Vandor defied Perón's call for open conflict with the Illia administration, moreover. The issue of the UP divided Vandor and his allies in the CGT from the CGT Secretary General, José Alonso, and his allies (including Andrés Framini, who had run on the UP ticket in 1962 and won, only to have the elections annulled). Vandor's very prominence made him the UP's paramount figure, and by extension, the first viable Peronist alternative to Perón in the movement's twenty years of existence.

Despite fears this might trigger a coup, the elections proceeded on schedule. President Illia's centrist UCR did not benefit from economic growth, and they lost 4 seats. Former President Pedro Aramburu's anti-peronist UDELPA benefited even less from Perón's barely thwarted return, and they lost half their 14 seats. Former President Arturo Frondizi's MID, which had been barred from running by conservative opposition in 1963, picked up 16 seats in its first electoral test. This was significant because the MID had bested his former party, the UCRI (with which he had parted ways in 1963). The UCRI was left with but 11 of its 40 seats, the result of losing both Frondizi's and Perón's erstwhile support. Most of these seats went to the Popular Union, which gained 44. Its leader, Dr. Rodolfo Tecera del Franco, was elected vice president of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies.

The 1965 elections were a notable accomplishment for President Illia, who had stopped military interference against them without it immediately costing him the presidency.

Results

Results by province

ProvincePopular UnionUCRPCenter PartiesMIDOther PeronistsOthersVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsBuenos AiresBuenos Aires CityChacoChubutCórdobaCorrientesEntre RíosLa PampaMendozaNeuquénRío NegroSan JuanSan LuisSanta CruzSanta FeSantiago del EsteroTucumánTotal2,786,24431.12352,660,93729.7234661,1087.388538,0576.015513,7215.7491,794,18220.048
1,358,65141.1214970,70129.389180,4445.461114,8843.48119,8470.600659,29319.961
549,05733.698552,67833.91858,8763.61054,8083.3605,4320.330409,00925.092
80,93043.54260,22032.4017,4414.00015,1278.14022,13811.910
16,54533.59117,03534.5913,6087.3305,12510.4106,94014.090
357,54438.755339,03936.75469,4547.53037,6874.0809,0070.980109,88611.910
45,21218.89014,3085.980156,35465.32523,5079.820
18,6024.850123,36932.14229,9897.81060,11715.66197,04425.28154,72014.260
32,48840.32117,35621.54022,03727.3518,70010.800
16,1994.74087,66625.651104,12030.4619,2752.71097,70528.59126,8267.850
9,39523.4502,9687.41021,05252.5526,64916.600
20,60029.8411,9662.8504,7776.92028,15840.79113,53119.600
25,64315.21028,35716.8213,2151.9102,3591.4004,8062.850104,18361.812
19,70023.3708,60310.21028,94334.34123,29727.6413,7524.450
3,70725.9312,64924.0306954.8607195.0303062.1406,22043.511
196,79420.852274,54729.09412,7901.350198,47321.03230,7593.260230,57324.432
36,24919.82160,49233.0711,8841.0309,1575.01051,02327.90124,09113.170
28,9239.21073,92223.5314,9371.5702,0610.660120,16038.25284,16426.790

References

References

  1. [http://historiapolitica.com/datos/biblioteca/Rein.pdf El primer peronismo sin Perón] {{in lang. es
  2. McGuire, James. (1997). "Peronism Without Peron: Unions, Parties, and Democracy in Argentina". Stanford University Press.
  3. [http://todo-argentina.net/historia/civmil/illia/1965.html Todo Argentina: 1965] {{in lang. es
  4. Cantón, Darío. (1968). "Materiales para el estudio de la sociología política en la Argentina". Centro de Investigaciones Sociales - [[Torcuato di Tella Institute]].
  5. Nohlen, Dieter. (2005). "Elections in the Americas: A Data Handbook". [[Oxford University Press]].
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