Gray was the president of the party in the province of Bueno
Jan 25, 2024 4:13:40 GMT
Post by account_disabled on Jan 25, 2024 4:13:40 GMT
The son of the bi-presidential dynasty. Insaurralde and other scandalous Peronist characters Peronism, which has an unbeatable image, lost four presidential elections (1983, 1999, 2015 and 2023) and several legislative elections in these forty years of democracy. The last in 2021, when he lost 5.2 million votes in just two years. The last great Peronist victory was in the now distant 2011, when Cristina Kirchner obtained 54% of the votes. She was a Cristina who received popular solidarity with her recent widowhood - her husband, former president Néstor Kirchner, had died a year earlier - and that she had a country with socioeconomic indices infinitely better than the current ones. The attitude of Peronism in the opposition will depend a lot on who is in charge of this space A question that will begin to be answered starting this December 10 is the attitude of Peronism in the opposition and that will depend a lot on who is in charge of this space: Resistance or opposition? In 2015, when they lost to Macri, there was strong resistance.
And this is what picketing groups and some unionists are already warning. In a much more complicated panorama than the one that occurred in 2015, with announcements of very harsh adjustments, which foreshadow blood, sweat Phone Number Database and tears, a mobilization against the new government would be justified from minute one. The decline of Peronism does not necessarily mean its death. History shows that he has already gone through hard times and failure. When he lost in 1983 to Raúl Alfonsín , the renewal took place that led to the arrival of Menem; In 1999, the neoliberal experience failed, but so did the subsequent government of Fernando De la Rúa . What would later become Kirchnerism emerged from the crisis. And in 2015 he was defeated again, in this case by the center-right coalition of Mauricio Macri , which when it failed again gave birth to the strange two-front government of Alberto Fernández / Cristina Kirchner .
A bath of reality for Milei The policy announced with Milei will surely lead Peronism to highlight its position in recent years, even if it has failed. And to understand the direction that Peronism can take, it is essential to understand its nature. The French political scientist Alain Rouquié, one of the great specialists in Argentina, already said that Peronism never had an ideology: “It changed the national culture, but that does not mean having an ideology. Perón was a Mussolinian, he always was, a Labor member. He then encouraged the violent Castro-Guevarist groups and then returned in 1973 to restore representative democracy, having been an anti-liberal all his life. In his mouth, the supreme insult was the word demoliberal. And he said that at the same time that he restored democracy in Argentina.”
And this is what picketing groups and some unionists are already warning. In a much more complicated panorama than the one that occurred in 2015, with announcements of very harsh adjustments, which foreshadow blood, sweat Phone Number Database and tears, a mobilization against the new government would be justified from minute one. The decline of Peronism does not necessarily mean its death. History shows that he has already gone through hard times and failure. When he lost in 1983 to Raúl Alfonsín , the renewal took place that led to the arrival of Menem; In 1999, the neoliberal experience failed, but so did the subsequent government of Fernando De la Rúa . What would later become Kirchnerism emerged from the crisis. And in 2015 he was defeated again, in this case by the center-right coalition of Mauricio Macri , which when it failed again gave birth to the strange two-front government of Alberto Fernández / Cristina Kirchner .
A bath of reality for Milei The policy announced with Milei will surely lead Peronism to highlight its position in recent years, even if it has failed. And to understand the direction that Peronism can take, it is essential to understand its nature. The French political scientist Alain Rouquié, one of the great specialists in Argentina, already said that Peronism never had an ideology: “It changed the national culture, but that does not mean having an ideology. Perón was a Mussolinian, he always was, a Labor member. He then encouraged the violent Castro-Guevarist groups and then returned in 1973 to restore representative democracy, having been an anti-liberal all his life. In his mouth, the supreme insult was the word demoliberal. And he said that at the same time that he restored democracy in Argentina.”