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1928 Argentine general election

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1928 Argentine general election

1 April 1928
Presidential election
← 1922
1931 →

376 members of the Electoral College
189 votes needed to win
Registered1,807,566
Turnout80.86%
 
Nominee Hipólito Yrigoyen Leopoldo Melo
Party UCR Confederation
Running mate Francisco Beiró Vicente Gallo
Electoral vote 249 124
Popular vote 839,140 470,050
Percentage 61.42% 34.48%

Results by province

President before election

Marcelo T. de Alvear
UCR

Elected President

Hipólito Yrigoyen
UCR

Chamber of Deputies
← 1926
1930 →

80 of the 158 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout83.12%
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Radical Civic Union

56.92 53 +39
Confederation of the Right [es]

29.06 21 −17
Independent Socialist Party

3.89 6 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by province

General elections were held in Argentina on 1 April 1928. Hipólito Yrigoyen of the Radical Civic Union (UCR) was elected president, with the UCR also gaining a majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Voter turnout was 81%.

Background

[edit]
Former President Hipólito Yrigoyen works the crowd in a 1926 rally. Nostalgia for the charismatic populist brought UCR voters back into his fold in 1928.

Former President Hipólito Yrigoyen's differences with his successor and erstwhile ally, Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear, persuaded him to campaign for the presidency again. Doing so meant overcoming a host of obstacles, however: his "Antipersonalist" opposition within the UCR, though divided, eroded his allies' majority in Congress from 91 seats (out of 158) to 72 in 1924 and 60 in 1926,[1] and he himself was 78 and in declining health.

These developments encouraged not only the Antipersonalists, but also conservatives, who united behind Julio A. Roca's Rightist Confederation. The Governor of the important Córdoba Province, Roca was the son of General Julio Roca, who had dominated the country politically between 1880 and 1906 and, in the minds of their supporters, recalled a certain nostalgia for the pastoral Argentina of the time. President Alvear's Antipersonalist UCR nominated the leader of the 1924 dissension that created the movement, Senator Leopoldo Melo. Melo underscored the conservative bent of his campaign by naming Senator Vicente Gallo as his running mate; Gallo was a founding member of the paramilitary Argentine Patriotic League, and had resigned as President Alvear's Interior Minister after unsuccessfully lobbying to have a pro-Yrigoyen governor removed.[2]

The Socialists, who vied for the majority in the Buenos Aires City Legislature (but had little following elsewhere), themselves balked at the possibility of victory in 1928 and split during their 1927 convention over Senator Juan B. Justo's intransigent leadership of the party. Senator Justo died suddenly in January 1928, and the party presented two tickets: the Authentic Socialists, led by Congressman Mario Bravo and running only in the City of Buenos Aires, and the more conservative Independent Socialists, led Justo's running-mate, former University of La Plata Director José Nicolás Matienzo.[3]

Election night was a referendum on the charismatic Yrigoyen, as well as on the largely positive memories voters had of 1916–22 term. Yrigoyen had further built on this sentiment by focusing debate in the closing days of the campaign on the future of YPF, thereby presenting himself as its best defense against the oil concern's chief antagonist, Standard Oil. His ticket swept the polls, recovering the majority it enjoyed in the Lower House in the early 1920s (with 53 of 79 seats at stake), and winning 5 of 10 contested Senate seats. His faction won majorities in all major districts: the City of Buenos Aires, and in Buenos Aires, Córdoba and Santa Fe Provinces (the latter two had been in opposition hands since 1920 and 1918, respectively). Mendoza Province, which remained in the reformist former Governor Carlos Washington Lencinas' Dissident UCR column, continued to be denied its two senators by the body, itself.[4]

Bravo's Authentic Socialists lost to Matienzo's splinter ticket (though only an endorsement by San Juan Governor Federico Cantoni gave the latter 3 electoral votes).[3] Roca's Unified Front, which lost in their home province of Córdoba, had endorsed the Antipersonalist UCR Melo-Gallo ticket, and pledged their 20 electors to the latter in a symbolic alliance. Minor and provincial parties, for their part, opted instead to abstain from casting most of their combined 84 electoral votes, thereby creating the largest such deficit in the history of the Argentine Electoral College (abolished in 1994 by the constitutional convention held that year). Yrigoyen's running mate, Francisco Beiró, died before taking office, and Córdoba Governor Enrique Martínez was elected to the post by the electoral college.[5] Yrigoyen was sworn in on October 12, 1928.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]

President

[edit]
CandidateRunning mateParty or alliancePublic voteElectoral vote
Votes%Votes%
Hipólito YrigoyenFrancisco BeiróRadical Civic Union839,14061.4224966.22
Leopoldo MeloVicente GalloConfederation
of the
Right
 [es]
Antipersonalist Radical Civic Union [es]155,37111.3712432.98
United Front89,2496.53
Conservative Party73,0485.35
Unified Radical Civic Union [es]47,4123.47
Lencinist Radical Civic Union [es]20,1661.48
Blockist Radical Civic Union [es]16,3791.20
Liberal Party of Tucumán15,7181.15
Liberal Democratic Party [es]11,3000.83
Liberal Party of Mendoza1,4070.10
Total430,05031.48
Mario BravoNicolás RepettoSocialist Party67,4234.94
No candidateNo candidateDemocratic Progressive Party14,1731.04
José Nicolás MatienzoManuel Carlés [es]Dissident
Radicalism
Radical Civic Union – Railway to Jáchal3,2180.2430.80
Radical Civic Union – Railway to Calingasta2,7820.20
Total6,0000.44
Rodolfo GhioldiMiguel ContrerasCommunist Party of Argentina4,6580.34
José Fernando Penelón [es]Florindo MorettiCommunist Party of the Argentine Republic1,2860.09
No candidateNo candidateCommunist Workers' Party4930.04
No candidateNo candidateOthers2,9960.22
Total1,366,219100.00376100.00
Valid votes1,366,21995.44
Invalid votes00.00
Blank votes65,2454.56
Total votes1,431,464100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,807,56679.19
Source: Cantón,[6] Ministry of the Interior,[7] Diario Santa Fe[8]

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Radical Civic Union751,04456.895389
Confederation of the Right [es]Unified Radical Civic Union [es]70,4005.33412
United Front67,3505.1000
Conservative Party65,1014.93815
Antipersonalist Radical Civic Union [es]59,1444.4818
Democratic Party of Córdoba [es]32,4542.4636
Autonomist Party of Corrientes24,8711.8823
Lencinist Radical Civic Union [es]20,2871.5411
Liberal Party of Corrientes15,7391.1902
Liberal Party of Tucumán14,8861.1314
Liberal Democratic Party [es]11,2550.8511
Liberal Party of Mendoza1,9740.1501
Blockist Radical Civic Union [es]2
Provincial Union2
Total383,46129.052157
Socialist Party70,0235.3004
Independent Socialist Party51,2733.8866
Democratic Progressive Party15,3281.1600
Communist Party of Argentina4,2480.3200
Public Health Party [es]3,5380.2700
Communist Party of the Argentine Republic2,0820.1600
Independent Workers' Party1,5060.1100
Communist Workers' Party6760.0500
National Feminist Party [es]2150.0200
Labor Party1140.0100
Independents36,6112.7700
Vacant2
Total1,320,119100.0080158
Valid votes1,320,11994.75
Invalid/blank votes73,1975.25
Total votes1,393,316100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,676,21783.12
Source: Cantón,[6] Chamber of Deputies,[9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18] El Orden,[19][20] Crítica[21]

References

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  1. ^ Nohlen, Dieter. Elections in the Americas. Oxford University Press, 2005.
  2. ^ Todo Argentina: 1927 Archived 2018-10-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  3. ^ a b Diario Libre: Historia electoral de la Argentina (1904-32) Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Unión Cívica Radical. Evolución del radicalismo Parte I (1893-1928) Archived 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Todo Argentina: 1928 (in Spanish)
  6. ^ a b Cantón, Darío (1968). Materiales para el estudio de la sociología política en la Argentina (PDF). Vol. Tomo I. Buenos Aires: Centro de Investigaciones Sociales - Torcuato di Tella Institute. p. 101.
  7. ^ Historia Electoral Argentina (1912-2007) (PDF). Ministry of Interior - Subsecretaría de Asuntos Políticos y Electorales. December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 September 2014.
  8. ^ "Posición definitiva de los candidatos a diputados nacionales por nuestra provincia". Diario Santa Fe. 25 April 1928.
  9. ^ Expediente 112-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  10. ^ Expediente 82-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  11. ^ Expediente 15-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  12. ^ Expediente 21-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  13. ^ Expediente 10-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  14. ^ Expediente 70-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  15. ^ Expediente 7-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  16. ^ Expediente 30-OV-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  17. ^ Las Fuerzas Armadas restituyen el imperio de la soberanía popular: Las elecciones generales de 1946 (PDF). Vol. Tomo I. Buenos Aires: Imprenta de la Cámara de Diputados. 1946. p. 432.
  18. ^ Expediente 8-D-1928 (PDF). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación Argentina. 1928.
  19. ^ "En Santiago del Estero". El Orden. 21 April 1928.
  20. ^ "Termina Córdoba". El Orden. 26 April 1928.
  21. ^ "Totales Generales de la Capital" (PDF). Crítica. No. Nº 5312. 5 May 1928. p. 1.