翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Federal Palace of Switzerland
・ Federal Parliament of Somalia
・ Federal Parliamentary Assembly
・ Federal parliamentary republic
・ Federal parole in the United States
・ Federal Party
・ Federal Party (Argentina)
・ Federal Party (Puerto Rico)
・ Federal Party of Manipur
・ Federal Patent Court
・ Federal Patent Court of Germany
・ Federal Patent Court of Switzerland
・ Federal Penitentiary Service
・ Federal Penitentiary Service Intelligence
・ Federal Perkins Loan
Federal Peronism
・ Federal Planning Bureau
・ Federal Plant Pest Act of 1957
・ Federal Point Light
・ Federal Point, Florida
・ Federal Police (Austria)
・ Federal Police (Belgium)
・ Federal Police (Germany)
・ Federal Police (Mexico)
・ Federal Police Department
・ Federal Police Special Units
・ Federal political financing in Canada
・ Federal Polytechnic
・ Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti
・ Federal Polytechnic, Bauchi


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Federal Peronism : ウィキペディア英語版
Federal Peronism

| seats2_title = Seats in the Senate
| seats2 =
| colours = Azure
| website =
| country = Argentina
}}
Federal Peronism ((スペイン語:Peronismo Federal)), or Dissident Peronism ((スペイン語:Peronismo disidente)), are the informal names given to a political alliance between Justicialist Party figures, currently identified mostly by its opposition to ruling Kirchnerism, the center-left faction that heads the national Government of Argentina and leads the Peronist movement.
The term "Federal Peronism," as opposed to "metropolitan Peronism" (mainly from Greater Buenos Aires), was informally used since the 1980s to identify the more traditional and conservative Peronists from the Provinces of Argentina, whose governors grew in number and influence during the administration of President Carlos Menem.
"Dissident Peronism" is more properly used to refer to the Peronist opposition to the administrations and party leadership of left-leaning Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. The term gained currency since the 2008 Argentine government conflict with the agricultural sector, when a number of party leaders, governors and legislators (mainly from the agroexporter provinces) withdrew their support of the national government.
==Overview==
Following the crisis that precipitated the resignation of President Fernando de la Rúa on December 21, 2001, the opposition Justicialist Party won a majority in both houses of the Argentine Congress in the October 2001 mid-term elections. The first interim President of Argentina elected by Congress after de la Rúa's resignation, San Luis Province Senator Adolfo Rodríguez Saá, had the support of a group of governors and legislators from the hinterland provinces, from where the informal designation of ''Federal Peronism'' originated. He resigned a week later, however, after failing to gain support from other factions of Peronism, from organized labor, and other sectors of Argentine society. The former Governor of Buenos Aires Province and runner-up in the 1999 general election, Eduardo Duhalde was elected by the Congress as interim President of Argentina on January 2, 2002.

Eduardo Duhalde, who counted on the support of Buenos Aires Province Peronism and some labor union leaders, called elections for April 2003, and persuaded the fractious Justicialist Party to present candidates directly to the general elections, without party primaries. After attempting to endorse other candidates (Carlos Reutemann, who refused to run, and José Manuel de la Sota, who did badly at the polls), Duhalde threw his support behind the little-known Governor of Santa Cruz Province, Néstor Kirchner. Federal Peronists, in turn, were represented in the elections by two factions, one headed by former President Carlos Menem and Governor of Salta Province José Luis Romero, identified with the policies spoused by Menem's 1989-99 presidency, and the other by Adolfo Rodríguez Saá and his brother, Alberto Rodríguez Saá, in an alliance with Radical Civic Union lawmaker Melchor Posse. Menem and Kirchner emerged as the runoff candidates, but the former President withdrew on May 14 as he anticipated a landslide defeat (the polls favored Kirchner 70%–30%), and Kirchner became the president-elect.〔(Todo Argentina: Kirchner ) 〕
The alliance between President Kirchner and Duhalde had been dissolved by the 2005 mid-term elections. Kirchner and Duhalde fielded their respective wives (each an influential lawmaker in her own right), Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and Hilda González de Duhalde, as leaders of their party lists in Buenos Aires Province (the nation's largest constituency). The landslide victory of the Kirchners' FpV consolidated their leadership role in the Justicialist Party,〔(''Clarín'': Un Presidente fuerte, con límits ) 〕 and this in turn forced Duhalde to break with the official Peronist body, the Justicialist Party, in which Kirchnerism had become the dominant force. He thus established Federal Peronism on November 4, 2005, and gathered a caucus of 25 Congressmen in its support.〔(''La Nación'': Duhalde dejará la política y su sector queda en libertad de acción ) 〕 They later backed Alberto Rodríguez Saá's conservative Peronist candidacy in the 2007 presidential elections, where Mrs. Kirchner was elected to succeed her husband with 45% of the vote (twice that of the runner-up, and six times that of Rodríguez Saá).〔(BBC News: Argentina's first lady wins poll )〕
Dissident Peronism was united by its opposition to Kirchner's Front for Victory (FpV), which became the leading vehicle for left-wing Peronists and incorporated much of the official Peronist structure. Among the early leaders in Dissident Peronism also included Misiones Province Senator Ramón Puerta, Buenos Aires Province Congressman Carlos Ruckauf, and union leader Luis Barrionuevo. Barrionuevo, unlike most members of the CGT, was allied with Menem, who arguably remained the most prominent spokesman for neo-liberal policies in Argentina.
The 2008 Argentine government conflict with the agricultural sector over a proposed rise in export tariffs led to a sharp drop in presidential approval ratings, and numerous FpV lawmakers from more agrarian provinces broke with the party. The defections, which included 16 Lower House members and 4 Senators, thus resulted in the reemergence of Federal Peronism. The conflict also prompted Luis Barrionuevo, whose alliance with Menem had cost him support in the CGT, to organize a splinter trade union confederation, the "Blue and White CGT," to challenge the center-left wing leadership of Secretary General Hugo Moyano, albeit unsuccessfully.〔(''La Nación'': Se fracturó la CGT tras la reelección de Moyano ) 〕 A dissident Peronist who as an ally of Menem had never joined the FpV, businessman Francisco de Narváez, in turn formed an alliance with the center-right PRO in Buenos Aires Province and the city of Buenos Aires for the 2009 elections.〔(''Clarín'': El peronismo disidente y el macrismo, en un encuentro para limar asperezas ) 〕
The elections resulted in a setback for the governing, center-left Front for Victory and its allies, which lost their absolute majorities in both houses of Congress.〔(BBC News: Argentine President set for poll blow )〕 Former President Néstor Kirchner stood as head of the FpV party list in the important Buenos Aires Province. Kirchner's list was defeated, however, by the center-right PRO/Federal Peronism list headed by de Narváez; the loss in Buenos Aires Province, though narrow, was significant as the province had helped maintain Kirchnerism as the dominant force in Argentine politics since 2003.〔
Federal Peronism emerged from the 2009 mid-term elections with 45 Congressmen and 10 Senators, becoming the fourth and third-largest caucus in each house, respectively. The alliance began preparations for the 2011 elections by agreeing to a primary election for April 3, thereby uniting behind a single candidate.〔(''Ámbito Financiero'': Peronismo Federal fijó fecha de su primera interna: será el 3 de abril ) 〕 Among the candidates running in the Federal Peronist primary were: former President Eduardo Duhalde; Senators Adolfo Rodríguez Saá, Juan Carlos Romero, and Carlos Reutemann; Congressmen Felipe Solá and Francisco de Narváez; and Governor Mario Das Neves.〔(''Revista Debate'': Derecha económica y derecha política ) 〕 An alliance with PRO was also actively considered;〔(''La Nación'': Desde el Peronismo Federal no descartan una alianza con Macri ) 〕 Mauricio Macri expressed unwillingness to accept a running mate from outside PRO ranks, but ultimately withdrew his bid for the presidency.〔(''La Nación'': "No me veo con alguien que no sea de Pro" ) 〕
Trailing in the polls ahead of the 2011 elections,〔(''Ahora Info'': Encuestas. Poliarquía revela a una Cristina imbatible ) 〕〔(''La Crónica'': Cristina Fernández encabeza encuestas para 2011 ) 〕 Federal Peronists remained divided between Duhalde's Popular Front and Alberto Rodríguez Saá's Federal Commitment even after the national August primaries,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eduardo Duhalde officially launches presidential campaign )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Vernet confirms he will be Rodríguez Saá’s running mate )〕 with Rodríguez Saá attracting upscale voters, and Duhalde, older, mainly working-class voters.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Cómo será el voto a la oposición )〕 They finished third and fourth place in the October general election with 8% and 6% of the total vote, respectively.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Elecciones Nacionales 2011 (Presidente) )
Governor José Manuel de la Sota of Córdoba Province formally became a dissident Peronist in September 2012 by establishing a local Justicialist Party faction opposed to Kirchnerism.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=De la Sota estrena su alianza peronista disidente )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Federal Peronism」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.