Peronism
Argentine political movement
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We include updates on Jorge Luis Borges, National Reorganization Process, Justicialist Party, Union for the Homeland, Kirchnerism, Montoneros, Revolución Libertadora, Argentine Anticommunist Alliance, Renewal Front, Agrupación de Trabajadores Latinoamericanos Sindicalistas, Raúl Apold, Peronist Armed Forces, Tendencia Revolucionaria, Menemism, National Universitary Concentration, Frente de Liberación Homosexual ... and more.
2023 | Sergio Massa of Unidad Provenir (UP) led the Kirchnerist movement, winning 33.62% of votes and maintaining a minority position in the Chamber of Deputies. |
2023 | Sergio Massa, representing Union for the Homeland, defeated in the presidential election, receiving 44.35% of votes in the second round. |
2023 | Union for the Homeland participated in legislative elections for the Senate, led by José Mayans, receiving 5,076,244 votes (43.72%) and positioning themselves in the opposition. |
2023 | Union for the Homeland participated in legislative elections for the Chamber of Deputies, led by Germán Martínez, receiving 9,298,491 votes (37.88%) and positioning themselves in the opposition. |
2023 | The coalition was formed to compete in the 2023 general election, succeeding the previous Frente de Todos coalition. |
December 2023 | Union for the Homeland becomes the main opposition coalition in Argentina after the general election. |
November 2023 | Libertarian candidate Javier Milei defeated Sergio Massa in the presidential runoff with 55.65% of the vote, the highest percentage since Argentina's transition to democracy. |
August 2023 | In the primary elections, Sergio Massa defeated Juan Grabois by nearly 16 percentage points, marking the worst result for a ruling Peronist coalition since PASO was implemented in 2009. |
April 2023 | President Alberto Fernandez announced he would not seek re-election in the upcoming presidential election. |
2021 | Alberto Fernández continues leading the Kirchnerist coalition, securing a majority in the Senate with 31.67% of votes. |
2021 | Frente de Todos coalition suffered a significant defeat in the Argentine legislative election, losing control of Congress for the first time in nearly 40 years. |
November 14 2021 | In the legislative elections, Frente de Todos loses its majority in Congress for the first time in almost 40 years, with the center-right coalition Juntos por el Cambio winning a significant victory. |
2019 | Kirchnerism returns to power with Alberto Fernández elected as President and Cristina Kirchner as Vice President, reviving the political movement. |
2019 | Alberto Fernandez elected president within the Everyone's Front, winning 48.24% of votes. |
2019 | Alberto Fernández was elected President of Argentina as the candidate of the previous Frente de Todos coalition. |
2019 | Alberto Fernández secured 48% of the vote in the presidential primaries. |
2019 | Frente de Todos coalition formed as a Peronist electoral front for the presidential election, presenting Alberto Fernández as its candidate. |
2015 | Kirchnerism suffers its first political defeat in a presidential election, marking a significant turning point for the political movement. |
2015 | Cristina Kirchner remained the leader of the Front for Victory (FPV), maintaining a minority position in the Chamber of Deputies. |
2013 | Cristina Kirchner and the Front for Victory (FPV) regained a majority in the Chamber of Deputies, winning 33.2% of votes. |
2011 | Cristina Kirchner re-elected president, winning 54.11% of votes. |
This contents of the box above is based on material from the Wikipedia articles Kirchnerism & Union for the Homeland, which are released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.