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Due to political disputes between Perón and the U.S. government (as well as to pressure by the U.S. agricultural lobby through the Agricultural Act of 1949), Argentine foreign exchange earnings via its exports to the United States fell, turning a US$100 million surplus with the United States into a US$300 million deficit. The combined pressure ...
"A government without doctrine is a body without soul. That's why Peronism has a political, economic and social doctrine: Justicialism." "Justicialism is a new philosophy of life: simple, practical, of the common people, and profoundly Christian and humanist." "As political doctrine, Justicialism balances the right of the individual and society."
Juan Domingo Perón receives the presidential attributes from his predecessor Edelmiro Farrel on June 4, 1946. When Perón was elected, his coalition won the majority of the chamber of deputies and the entirety of the senate. As a result, his government was able to replace the supreme court judges with others aligned with them.
Peronism is a political current that was established between November 1943 and October 1945, as a result of an alliance between a large number of unions, principally of socialist and revolutionary union ideology, and two soldiers – Juan Domingo Perón and Domingo Mercante, whose initial objective was to run the National Labor Department ...
51.19% 109 Radical Civic Union 27.23% 44 National Democratic Party 7.64 3 Democratic Progressive Party 2.55 1 Blockist Radical Civic Union [es] 0.49 1 This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. Results by province President of the Chamber of Deputies after Ricardo Guardo UCR-JR [es] Politics of Argentina Executive President (List) Javier Milei Vice President Victoria ...
What Milei calls "la casta" has its origins in the post–World War II era, when President Juan Perón built vast patronage networks and gave political interest groups outsized influence over the ...
The Argentine Constitutional Reforms of 1949 were approved during Juan Domingo Perón's government. This new constitution was a major revision of the Constitution of Argentina. Its goal was to modernize and adapt the text to the twentieth century's concepts of democracy, with a bill of social rights, including better working conditions for the ...
Her husband, Juan Perón, was president of Argentina and died in office in 1974. As the vice president, she took over many of his duties when he became ill, and was sworn in to the presidency ...