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1954 Argentine general election

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FieldValue
countryArgentina
previous_election1951 Argentine general election
previous_year1951
next_election1958 Argentine general election
next_year1958
election_date25 April 1954
module{{Infobox election
embedyes
election_nameVice presidential election
typepresidential
registered9,222,075
turnout85.58%
image1Vicepresidente Alberto Teisaire.png
nominee1**Alberto Teisaire**
popular_vote1**4,944,106**
percentage1**64.52%**
party1Peronist Party
image2Crisólogo_Larralde_circa_1946.jpg
nominee2
popular_vote22,493,422
percentage232.22%
party2Radical Civic Union
map_image1954 Argentine vice-presidential election.png
map_size210px
map_captionResults by province
titleVice President
before_electionVacant
before_party(Hortensio Quijano deceased in 1952)
posttitleVice President-elect
after_electionAlberto Teisaire
after_partyPeronist Party
module{{Infobox legislative election
embedyes
election_nameChamber of Deputies election
seats_for_election88 of the 169 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
turnout86.00%
noleaderyes
party1Peronist Party
percentage164.28
seats174
last_election170
party2Radical Civic Union
percentage232.31
seats25
last_election27
module{{Infobox legislative election
embedyes
election_nameSenate election
seats_for_election18 of the 34 seats in the Senate
noleaderyes
nopercentageyes
party1Peronist Party
seats118
last_election115

General elections were held in Argentina on 25 April 1954. Voters chose both their legislators and the Vice-president of Argentina with a turnout of 85%.

Background

The death of his wife and closest advisor, Evita, stuck President Juan Perón amid serious difficulties. A severe drought in 1952 and years of pessimism in Argentina's important agrarian sector depleted foreign reserves and forced Perón to curtail public lending and spending programs. The recession (and a bumper crop) did, however, allow Central Bank reserves to recover and brought inflation (50% in 1951) to single digits.

Controversy surrounding Perón's in-laws and political violence both by and against his Peronist movement had dogged the president in the first half of 1953, and he took the opportunity of upcoming legislative polls to test his popularity. The Argentine Constitution did not require it at the time, but the President announced a special election to replace the late Vice President, Hortensio Quijano. Dr. Quijano had died on April 3, 1952, two months and one day before his term was to have ended on June 4, 1952. Perón nominated Senator Alberto Teisaire as the candidate for the then named Partido Peronista (Peronist Party).

Teisaire was familiar to Perón from the 1943 coup d'état; the former rear admiral had helped retain the normally restive Navy's support for the populist leader before and after Perón's 1946 election and, after eight years in the Senate, he remained close to the military - a far from trivial consideration.

In the opposition since 15 years before Perón took office, the centrist UCR had been burdened by censorship and sundry forms of harassment since 1930, and 1953 had been marked by the jailing of most of their leaders. Among the few prominent figures in the party available to run for the vice-presidency was . Larralde had opposed the UCR's 1945 alliance with conservatives and socialists against Perón, and was a well-known figure in the UCR's dissident, pro-Perón "Renewal Group." This did not, however, ease the UCR's restriction to access to most mass media, and the party was defeated by similar numbers to their 1951 loss.

Results

Vice president

Chamber of Deputies

won|seattype2=Deputies total|seattype3=Delegates won|seattype4=Delegates total|seattype5=Total seats

Senate

References

References

  1. [https://web.archive.org/web/20081017143947/http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/peronista/peron2/1953.html Todo Argentina: 1953 {{in lang. es]
  2. Potash, Robert. ''The Army and Politics in Argentina''. Stanford University Press, 1996.
  3. [https://web.archive.org/web/20081017143956/http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/peronista/peron2/1954.html Todo Argentina: 1954 {{in lang. es]
  4. [http://www.unsam.edu.ar/escuelas/politica/centro_historia_politica/materiales/Materiales%20sobre%20procesos%20electorales%201946-1955/Elecci%C3%B3n%201954/archivo%203%201954.pdf National University of San Martín]
  5. Nohlen, Dieter. (2005). "Elections in the Americas: A Data Handbook". [[Oxford University Press]].
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