Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
En Profundidad  
 
04/11/2015 | Argentina changes course: what’s next in runoff elections

John Cordero

After the shock upset in the October 25th elections, in which conservative candidate Mauricio Macri obtained 34% of the vote and forced a runoff against President Cristina Kirchner’s candidate Daniel Scioli, who finished with 36%, Argentinians will head to the polls on November 22nd to choose their next president.

 

On opposite sides of the ideological spectrum, Macri and Scioli will both be furiously courting supporters of third-place finisher Sergio Massa, who broke with Kirchner over a political feud and has hinted at supporting Macri in the runoff.

Argentina is in the midst of a financial crisis, brought on by a debt default in 2002.  A New York federal court judge has ordered payment of $1.3 billion to hedge funds that bought Argentinian government bonds, which Kirchner and Scioli have rejected, calling instead for a reduced amount and deriding the funds as “vultures.”  Macri, on the other hand, has stated that the debt should be paid and government spending reduced, alleging that the populist model followed by Kirchner and endorsed by Scioli has led to widespread poverty, inflation, and denied opportunities to college graduates, who have emigrated in record numbers in the past ten years.

Scioli, on the other hand, accuses Macri of following the “failed neo-liberal model” that led to Argentina’s default and of being a rich businessman out of touch with the common folk. The runoff campaign has turned negative as most polls show Macri having an advantage.  Scioli’s association with Kirchner may be hurting his standing, as most Argentinians are convinced she played a role in the death of prosecutorAlberto Nisman, who was found dead hours before he was to publicly reveal evidence he collected linking Kirchner to Iran over the 1994 bombing of the Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires and subsequent investigation.

With a conciliatory message aimed at the independents and Massa’s supporters, Macri is counting on the Argentinian’s public fatigue with scandals and political acrimony to propel him to victory.  Meanwhile, Scioli is hyping up fears of a currency devaluation and cuts to social welfare programs to preserve the populist regime in power.  It is clear that Argentina is clamoring for change after 12 years of “Kirchnerism,” yet Macri will need more support from the center-left in order to overcome the electoral odds, which he has already done when virtually no one expected him to do so.

Center for Security Policy (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 1 to 10 of 5721 )
fecha titulo
11/11/2022 The Ultimate Unmasking of Henry Kissinger: Ambassador Robert C. Hilland the Rewriting of History on U.S. involvement in Vietnam and Argentina’s “Dirty Warâ€
10/11/2022 Un infierno astral se cierne sobre el Gobierno
24/04/2020 Argentina- Informe de Coyuntura semanal (versión corta) al 21 de abril sobre la situación política y económica argentina
20/04/2020 Argentina- Inflación y emisión: ¿qué pasará después de la cuarentena?
14/04/2020 Coronavirus en la Argentina. Alberto Fernández lleva al kirchnerismo a su lado más oscuro
09/04/2020 Argentina - Coronavirus: ¿No hay Estado presente para salvar a la economía?
06/04/2020 Argentina - ¿Una guerra de todos?
06/04/2020 El nuevo mundo de los corona-zombies
25/03/2020 Agentina - Informe de Coyuntura semanal (versión corta) al 24 de marzo sobre la situación política y económica argentina
22/09/2018 Sin dudas, la Argentina necesita volver a tener moneda


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
14/11/2015|
21/10/2015|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House