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Page "Economic history of Argentina" ¶ 98
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Peronist and Carlos
Carlos Menem of the Justicialist Party ( Peronist ) was the president for six more years and made a pact with Alfonsín in order to achieve a constitutional reform that would allow him to be reelected.
During the government of Carlos Menem a group of legislators led by Carlos Álvarez, known as the " Group of 8 ", left the party, claiming that the government was not following Peronist doctrines.
Frondizi supported Peronist candidate Carlos Menem in the May 1989 elections, though his support soured when Menem turned to neo-liberal and free trade policies.
Alfonsín was succeeded by Carlos Saúl Menem of the Peronist Justicialist Party ( PJ ).
It was formed in 1994 out of the Great Front ( Frente Grande ), which had been founded mainly by progressive members of the Peronist Justicialist Party who denounced the policies and the alleged corruption of the Carlos Menem administration ; the Frente joined with other dissenting Peronists, the Unidad Socialista and several other leftist parties and individuals.
The province, in 1948, elected a young Peronist activist named Carlos Juárez Governor of the province.
The province, in 1948, elected a young Peronist activist, Carlos Juárez, as its Governor.
Carlos Federico Ruckauf ( born July 10, 1944 ) is a Peronist politician in Argentina, member of the Justicialist Party.
This came after noting that the lootings often took place in Peronist-governed towns, and that the Buenos Aires Provincial Police ( which ultimately answered to Buenos Aires Governor Carlos Ruckauf, a top Peronist ) was strangely mild in restoring order.
He launched a bid for the presidency ahead of the 2003 general election, though he ultimately ran as Carlos Menem's running mate on the Peronist Front for Loyalty ticket.
In the 1980s, he served in the diocese of Añatuya, Santiago del Estero, a province ruled in a quasi-feudalistic fashion by the indefinitely-reelected old-time Peronist Carlos Juárez.
Sent to Argentina by Perón, exiled in Spain since the 1955 " Revolución Libertadora " coup, she organized a meeting in the house of major Bernardo Alberte, Perón's delegate and sponsor of various left-wing Peronist movement, among which the CGT de los Argentinos, a labor union federation which, between 1968 and 1972, gathered opponents to a pact with Juan Carlos Onganía's dictatorship, and which had an important role in the 1969 Cordobazo insurrection.

Peronist and Menem
Jacques de Mahieu, a French ideologue of the Peronist movement ( and former Vichy Collaborationist ), was photographed campaigning for Menem.
In 1998, Menem's attempt to stand for re-election a second time, by means of an ad hoc interpretation of a constitutional clause, met with strong resistance among Peronist rank-and-file, who were finding themselves under increasing pressure due to the highly controversial policies of the Menem administration and its involvement in corruption scandals.
The controversial bill, signed in 1996 by President Menem, remained a sticking point between successive Presidents ( most of whom have been Peronist ) and Buenos Aires Mayors ( none of whom have been ).

Peronist and was
As a Law student, he became a vocal Peronist, and after President Juan Perón's overthrow that year, he was briefly incarcerated.
He later joined the Peronist Party's successor, the Justicialist Party, and was elected President of its La Rioja Province chapter, in 1983.
Campaigning as a maverick within his own party, he defeated longtime Peronist leader Antonio Cafiero in the 1988 primary elections and was elected President on May 14, 1989, succeeding Raúl Alfonsín.
His campaign was centered on vague promises of a " productive revolution " and a " salariazo " ( jargon for big salary increases ), aimed at the working class, the traditional constituents of the Peronist Party.
This controversy notwithstanding, upon Argentina's return to democracy in December 1983, he became a close economic advisor to Peronist politician José Manuel de la Sota and was elected as a Peronist deputy for Córdoba Province in the 1987 mid-term polls.
Perón's return from exile was marked by a growing rift between the right and left wings of the Peronist movement.
Designating Senate President Ítalo Lúder, a moderately conservative Peronist, in her stead, it was widely hoped that her leave would become permanent ; but, it was not to be.
A judge in Mendoza, Argentina in November 2006 demanded testimony from Isabel Perón, along with other Peronist ministers of her government, in a case involving forced disappearances during her presidency ; on January 12, 2007, she was arrested in Madrid.
Hayes reaches the conclusion that " the Peronist movement produced a form of fascism that was distinctively Latin American ".
Left-wing Peronism was represented by many organizations, from the Montoneros and the Fuerzas Armadas Peronistas to the Peronist Youth, the Frente Revolucionario Peronista and the Revolutionary Peronist Youth, passing by Peronismo en Lucha or Peronismo de Base, which supported a Marxist viewpoint.
Another current was formed by the 62 Organizaciones " De pie junto a Perón ", led by José Alonso and opposed to the right-wing Peronist unionist movement.
José Cámpora, a left-wing Peronist, was replaced by interim President Raúl Alberto Lastiri, while Perón chose to openly support the Peronist right.
On October 1, 1973, senator Humberto Martiarena, who was the national secretary of the Superior Council of the National Justicialist Movement, publicized a document giving directives to confront " subversives, terrorist and Marxist groups " which had allegedly initiated a " war " inside the Peronist organizations.
The official Peronist party is the Justicialist Party ( PJ ), which was the only Peronist party for a long time.
Soria was the first Peronist elected Governor of Río Negro since 1973.
The " backbone of the Peronist movement ", as Perón referred to it, Frondizi's rappraochment with the CGT was designed to distance the powerful union, then South America's largest, from Peronism.

Peronist and elected
Juan Perón, elected three times as President of Argentina, and his second wife, Eva Duarte de Perón, were immensely popular among many of the Argentine people, and to this day they are still considered icons by the Peronist Party.
He was an early supporter of Antonio Cafiero's Peronist Renewal faction within the Justicialist Party, and was elected to the Argentine Chamber of Deputies for the City of Buenos Aires in 1985.

Peronist and president
By 2005, many large MTDs in Buenos Aires were co-opted, either by radical, intransigent left-wing ideological factions, or by the local Peronist municipal administrations, linked to former Buenos Aires governor and then interim president Eduardo Duhalde, and others to supporters of former president Néstor Kirchner.

Peronist and May
Duhalde confirmed his strength among centrist and conservative Peronists as the 2011 campaign unfolded by narrowly defeating Rodríguez Saá in a Buenos Aires Federal Peronist primary in May, though both men remained front-runners for their party's nomination in August.
Consumer prices doubled between May and August, alone, and though sharp, mandatory wage hikes had been negotiated between the government, labor and employers, the resulting shock ( known as the Rodrigazo ) ignited protest across Argentina, including a two-day general strike by the CGT ( the first ever against a Peronist administration ).
He was at the inauguration of Peronist President Héctor Cámpora on 25 May 1973, in Buenos Aires, along with Chilean President Salvador Allende.

Peronist and 1989
José López Rega ( 17 October 1916 – 9 June 1989 ) was Argentina's Minister of Social Welfare during the Peronist government started in 1973 by Juan Perón and continued after Perón's death in 1974 by his third wife and vice-president, Isabel Martínez de Perón ( 1974 – 76 ), until the coup d ' etat of 1976 that initiated the so-called National Reorganization Process ( 1976 – 83 ) under Jorge Videla's direction.

Peronist and .
The right wing of the Peronist party, the unions, and the Radical Party led by Ricardo Balbín favored a social pact between trade unions and employers rather than a violent socialist revolution.
On 21 February 1974, the Montoneros killed Teodoro Ponce, a right-wing Peronist labor leader in Rosario.
David Bargut, another Rosario steel executive, had been assassinated the day before. On 10 June 1975, Peronist guerrillas operating in the city of Santa Fe shoot and kill 38-year-old Juan Enrique Pelayes, a trade-union leader as he made his way to a bus-stop.
On 25 July 1975 four policemen were wounded in attacks in which the Peronist guerrillas employed bazookas and firebombs.
The Peronist guerrillas radioed for assistance and fled to waiting cars on a highway nearby.
** José López Rega, Argentine Peronist politician ( b. 1916 )
She also ran the Ministries of Labor and Health, founded and ran the charitable Eva Perón Foundation, championed women's suffrage in Argentina, and founded and ran the nation's first large-scale female political party, the Female Peronist Party.
Several short-lived interim presidents came and went, until Congress finally chose Eduardo Duhalde of the Justicialist Party ( Peronist ) to rule until some sort of social and economic peace could be restored.
Duhalde employed a mixture of traditional Peronist politics ( in the form of a monetary subsidy for heads of families ) and neo-Keynesian economic principles to stabilize the economy and bring peace to the streets.
Néstor Kirchner, who belongs to the moderate center-left wing of Peronism ( rooted in the leftist Peronist factions of the 1970s ), continued Duhalde's measures ( even keeping his Minister of Economy, Roberto Lavagna ) and added some heterodox economics.
Cavallo came in third place and received 11 % of the vote, far behind both de la Rúa and the other main candidate, Peronist Eduardo Duhalde.
Political pressure by the Peronist opposition and other organized economic interests coincided with the December 2001 riots.
A series of Peronist presidents came and left in the next few days, until Eduardo Duhalde, the opponent of De la Rua and Cavallo in the 1999 presidential election, took power on January 2, 2002.

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