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Isabel Perón taking office as President of Argentina, 1974. Juan Perón suffered a series of heart attacks on 28 June 1974; Isabel was summoned home from a European trade mission and secretly sworn in as acting president the next day. [18] [page needed] Juan Perón died on 1 July 1974, less than a year after his third election to office.
The Biden administration continued W-GDP's work under the Gender Equity and Equality Action Fund, which invested $300 million in direct resources and another $200 million in indirect funding ...
Catalina Cepernic's great-grandfather Jorge, a sheep-farm owner in Argentina's windswept Patagonia, was the first member of the family won over to the ideas of Juan Domingo Peron, the former ...
Simona Alegre, a 65-year-old widow, used to earn enough from her government pension to feed her six grandkids. "Now look at how things are," said Alegre, a lifelong Peronist voter. Alegre and her ...
During Isabel's visit, adviser Raúl Lastiri introduced her to his father-in-law, José López Rega. A policeman with an interest in the occult, he won Isabel's trust through their common dislike of Jorge Antonio, a prominent Argentine industrialist and the Peronist movement's main financial backer during their perilous 1960s. [166]
Orthodox Peronism, Peronist Orthodoxy, National Justicialism, [21] or right-wing Peronism for some specialists, [22] was a faction within Peronism, a political movement in Argentina that adheres to the ideology and legacy of Juan Perón.
Military zones of Argentina. The military operation to crush the insurgency was authorized by the Provisional President of the Senate, Ítalo Argentino Luder, who was granted executive power during the absence (due to illness) of President Isabel Perón, in virtue of the "Ley de Acefalía" (law of succession). Ítalo Luder issued the presidential decree 261/1975 which stated that the "general ...
His vice president and third wife, Isabel Perón, succeeded him, but she proved to be a weak, ineffectual ruler. A number of revolutionary organizations—chief among them Montoneros , a group of far-left Peronists—escalated their wave of political violence (including kidnappings and bombings ) against the campaign of harsh repressive and ...