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1985 Argentine legislative election

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FieldValue
countryArgentina
previous_election1983
next_election1987
seats_for_election127 of the 254 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
turnout83.77%
election_date3 November 1985
noleaderyes
party1Radical Civic Union
percentage143.58
last_election164
seats165
party2Justicialist Liberation Front
percentage224.49
last_election256
seats237
color3#318CE7
party3Dissident Peronists
party3_linkno
percentage310.52
last_election3New
seats311
party4Intransigent Party
percentage46.07
last_election42
seats45
party5Union of the Democratic Centre
percentage53.72
last_election51
seats52
party6Democratic Progressive Party
percentage61.24
last_election60
seats61
party7Autonomist–Liberal–Federal–PDP
percentage71.13
last_election71
seats72
party8Democratic Party of Mendoza
percentage80.62
last_election80
seats81
party9Salta Renewal Party
percentage90.46
last_election90
seats91
party10
percentage100.25
last_election100
seats101
party11Neuquén People's Movement
percentage110.22
last_election111
seats111
mapElecciones legislativas de Argentina de 1985 - Resultados por distrito.svg
map_captionResults by province

Legislative elections were held in Argentina on 3 November 1985. Voters chose their legislators, with a turnout of 84%.

Background

Raúl Alfonsín's 1983 inauguration had ushered in a new beginning for Argentina in significant ways, chief among them a new relationship between the Argentine military and government. Economic policy continued to dominate political dynamics, however, a concern exacerbated by the economic crisis inherited from the previous regime. The nation's leading labor union, the CGT, was close to the opposition Justicialist Party, and the tension between the CGT and Alfonsín so evident during 1984 (despite the President's populist early policies) turned to hostility after he replaced the pragmatic Minister of the Economy Bernardo Grinspun with the more conservative Juan Sourrouille in February 1985. Sorrouille curtailed his predecessor's wage indexation policy (amid 25% monthly inflation), leading to a sudden decline in real wages. Social discontent was compounded by military objections to sharp budget cutbacks, and bomb threats became frequent.

Fulfilling a 1983 campaign promise, Alfonsín reacted to military unwillingness to court-martial those guilty of Dirty War abuses (in which up to 30,000 mostly non-violent dissidents perished) by advancing a Trial of the Juntas, whose first hearings were held in April. This bold move was complemented by Sourrouille's June enactment of the Austral Plan, whose centerpiece, the Argentine austral would replace the worthless peso argentino at 1,000 to one. Inflation, which had reached 30% a month in June (1,130% for the year), fell to 2% by August and, though a wage freeze prevented real incomes from rising, these new inflation rates (the lowest since 1974) led to quick recovery from a sharp recession early in the year. Alfonsín enjoyed a 70% job approval rating by the time voters headed to the polls in early November, though he owed none of it to his economic policies, which were supported by only 30% of the public. The strong showing for Alfonsín's centrist UCR resulted, instead, from the Dirty War trial, a risky and daring initiative which had gathered international attention and was, by then, in its closing phase.

Results

Results by province

ProvinceUCRFREJULIDissident PeronistsPIOthersVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsBuenos AiresBuenos Aires CityCatamarcaChacoChubutCórdobaCorrientesEntre RíosFormosaJujuyLa PampaLa RiojaMendozaMisionesNeuquénRío NegroSaltaSan JuanSan LuisSanta CruzSanta FeSantiago del EsteroTierra del FuegoTucumánTotal6,678,64743.58653,753,19424.49371,611,44110.5211930,9406.0752,350,28815.349
2,381,78741.4616563,2699.8031,549,72426.9811574,28510.004675,75811.761
848,12342.907498,32025.21420,0751.020155,7207.881454,63323.001
57,80750.77249,83143.7712,1561.8901,2671.1102,7902.450
168,16947.662156,24544.2823,3150.94025,0927.110
53,50143.34143,58735.3111,9871.61024,36719.740
743,95852.375506,23535.64454,5513.840115,8048.150
87,79125.07168,04719.43010,6843.050183,64252.442
243,82046.613207,87839.74224,1844.62047,1829.020
58,96544.85159,10144.9614970.38012,9009.810
61,40334.03142,61023.61128,80215.9601,0800.60046,54425.791
58,08044.42252,25339.9712,0701.58018,33714.030
38,10642.05146,83951.6911,3351.4704,3424.790
342,87553.223166,84425.9016,9011.070127,63419.811
144,20954.632102,63238.8813,0371.15014,0905.340
48,29439.92128,59523.6312,4722.04041,62734.411
85,09753.11145,04228.11111,9467.46018,15411.330
109,79935.021108,06034.4711,5140.48094,13830.031
115,13645.44268,67327.1016,9922.76062,58024.700
61,02847.99257,73545.4011,9421.5306,4765.090
23,96747.97219,71339.4611,2122.4305,07010.150
577,14439.644506,94634.82465,9494.530305,88221.011
132,38949.162124,07346.0713,5191.3109,3213.460
4,67430.1715,41634.9617935.1204,61129.760
232,52545.462225,25044.0424,3720.85049,3149.640

References

References

  1. [http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/democracia/alfonsin/1984.html ''Todo Argentina: 1984'' {{in lang. es]
  2. [http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/democracia/alfonsin/1985.html ''Todo Argentina: 1985'' {{in lang. es]
  3. ''Noticias.'' 12 September 1991.
  4. "Elecciones Nacionales ESCRUTINIO DEFINITIVO 1985".
  5. "Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013".
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