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2019 Argentine general election

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(Redirected from2019 Argentine legislative election)

2019 Argentine general election

27 October 2019[1]
Opinion polls
Presidential election
← 2015
2023 →
Registered34,231,895
Turnout80.41%
 
NomineeAlberto FernándezMauricio MacriRoberto Lavagna
PartyPJPROIndependent
AllianceFdTJxCCF
Running mateCristina Fernández de KirchnerMiguel Ángel PichettoJuan Manuel Urtubey
Popular vote12,946,03710,811,5861,649,322
Percentage48.24%40.28%6.15%

President before election

Mauricio Macri
JxCPRO

Elected President

Alberto Fernández
FDTPJ

Chamber of Deputies
← 2017
2021 →

130 of the 257 seats in theChamber of Deputies
Turnout80.37%
PartyVote %Seats
Frente de Todos

45.2664
Juntos por el Cambio

40.3656
Federal Consensus

5.853
We Do for Córdoba

1.471
Civic Front for Santiago

1.273
Front for the Renewal of Concord

0.751
Together We Are Río Negro

0.471
Let's All Live Better

0.071
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Senate
← 2017
2021 →

24 of the 72 seats in theSenate
Turnout78.27%
PartyVote %Seats
Frente de Todos

40.1613
Juntos por el Cambio

39.228
Civic Front for Santiago

5.832
Together We Are Río Negro

2.721
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Presidential results by province
Congressional results by province
flagArgentina portal

General elections were held inArgentina on 27 October 2019, to elect thepresident of Argentina, members of the national congress and the governors of most provinces.[2]

The Peronist, left-wingFrente de Todos ticket ofAlberto Fernández, former Chief Cabinet, andCristina Fernández de Kirchner, National Senator and former president, defeated the center-rightJuntos por el Cambio ticket of incumbent presidentMauricio Macri and conservativePeronist National SenatorMiguel Ángel Pichetto, exceeding the threshold to win the presidency in a single round. Macri became the first incumbent president in Argentine history to be defeated in his reelection bid.

Electoral system

[edit]

The election of the president was conducted under theballotage system, a modified version of thetwo-round system. A candidate can win the presidency in a single round by either winning 45% of the vote, or if they win 40% of the vote while finishing 10percentage points ahead of the second-place candidate. If no candidate meets either threshold, a runoff takes place between the top two candidates.[3] Voting is compulsory for citizens between 18 and 70 years old.[4]Suffrage was also extended to 16- and 17-year-olds, though without compulsory voting.[5]

There are a total of 257 seats of the Chamber of Deputies. They are elected from 24 electoral districts–the 23 provinces, plus the federal district of Buenos Aires, which elects its own executive and legislature and is represented in the national Congress like all other provinces.[6] The number of seats are distributed in relation to the population of the province. One-third of the seats in the Chamber of Deputies are reserved for women. The 130 seats of theChamber of Deputies up for election were elected from 24 multi-member constituencies based on the 23provinces andBuenos Aires. Seats were allocated using theD'Hondt method ofproportional representation, with anelectoral threshold of 3%.[4]

The 24 seats in theSenate up for election were elected in three-seat constituencies using theclosed list system. Each district is represented by three senatorial seats. Each party is allowed to register up to two candidates; one of those registered must be female. The party receiving the most votes wins two seats, and the second-placed party wins one.[7] The third senatorial seat was established in theConstitution of 1994 in order to better represent the largest minority in each district.

Congress

[edit]
Number of deputies at stake in each province.
Provinces that elected senators in blue.

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]

The 257 members of theChamber of Deputies are elected by proportional representation in 24 multi-member constituencies based on theprovinces (plus theCity of Buenos Aires). Seats are allocated using thed'Hondt method with a 3% electoral threshold. In this election, 130 of the 257 seats are up for renewal for a 4-year term.[citation needed]

ProvinceTotal
seats
Seats
at stake
Buenos Aires7035
Buenos Aires City2512
Catamarca52
Chaco73
Chubut53
Córdoba189
Corrientes74
Entre Ríos94
Formosa53
Jujuy63
La Pampa52
La Rioja53
Mendoza105
Misiones74
Neuquén52
Río Negro53
Salta74
San Juan63
San Luis52
Santa Cruz52
Santa Fe1910
Santiago del Estero74
Tierra del Fuego53
Tucumán95
Total257130

Senate

[edit]

The 72 members of theSenate are elected in the same 24 constituencies, with three seats in each. The party receiving the most votes in each constituency wins two seats, with the third seat awarded to the second-placed party. The 2019 elections will see one-third of senators renewed, with eight provinces electing three senators for a 6-year term;Buenos Aires City,Chaco,Entre Ríos,Neuquén,Río Negro,Salta,Santiago del Estero andTierra del Fuego.[citation needed]

Candidates

[edit]

The following candidates successfully registered their nominations before the limit date of 22 June 2019, and went on to compete in theOpen, Simultaneous and Mandatory Primaries (PASO) on 11 August 2019.[8][9]

Presidential candidate
(political party)
Vice-presidential candidate
(political party)
CoalitionCoalition partiesPresidential candidate prior political offices
Alberto Fernández
(PJ)
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
(PJ)
Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers(2003–2008)
Mauricio Macri
(PRO)
Miguel Ángel Pichetto
(PJ)
President of Argentina(since 2015)
Chief of Government of Buenos Aires(2007–2015)
Roberto Lavagna
(Independent)
Juan Manuel Urtubey
(PJ)
Minister of Economy and Production(2003–2005)
Nicolás del Caño
(PTS)
Romina Del Plá
(PO)
National Deputy fromBuenos Aires(since 2017)
José Luis Espert
(PL)
Luis Rosales
(PL)
None (economist and professor)
Alejandro Biondini
(BV)
Enrique Venturino
(BV)
  • People's Countryside Party
  • People's Party
  • Neighborhood Flag

None (founder and president of Bandera Vecinal)
Manuela Castañeira
(Nuevo MAS)
Eduardo Mulhall
(Nuevo MAS)
None (sociologist)
Juan José Gómez Centurión
(NOS)
Cynthia Hotton
(Valores para mi País)
Vice-president of theBank of the Argentine Nation(2017–2019)
José Antonio Romero Feris
(PAN)
Guillermo Sueldo
(PAN)
National Senator forCorrientes(1987–2001)
Governor ofCorrientes(1983–1987)
Raúl Humberto Albarracín
(Neighbourhood Action Movement)
Sergio Darío Pastore
(Neighbourhood Action Movement)
Provincial legislator ofCórdoba(2007–2011)

Opinion polls

[edit]
Main article:Opinion polling for the 2019 Argentine general election

Results

[edit]

Primary elections

[edit]
See also:Primary elections in Argentina

Open primary elections for the presidency were held nationwide on 11 August. With this system, all parties run primary elections on a single ballot. All parties must take part in it, both the parties with internal factions and parties with a single candidate list. Citizens may vote for any candidate of any party, but may only cast a single vote. The most voted candidate of parties gaining 1.5% or higher of the valid votes advances to the general election.[10]

Fernández came top with 47.8% of the vote, with Macri trailing behind with 31.8%. Lavagna, del Caño, Gómez Centurión and Espert all received enough valid votes to participate in the general election.[11][12]

CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
Alberto FernándezCristina Fernández de KirchnerFrente de Todos12,205,93847.79
Mauricio MacriMiguel Ángel PichettoJuntos por el Cambio8,121,68931.80
Roberto LavagnaJuan Manuel UrtubeyFederal Consensus2,081,3158.15
Nicolás del CañoRomina Del PláWorkers' Left Front723,1472.83
Juan José Gómez CenturiónCynthia HottonNOS670,1622.62
José Luis EspertLuis RosalesUnite por la Libertad y la Dignidad550,5932.16
Manuela CastañeiraEduardo MulhallMovimiento al Socialismo179,4610.70
Alejandro BiondiniEnrique VenturinoPatriotic Front58,9440.23
Raúl AlbarracínSergio PastoreNeighbourhood Action Movement36,4110.14
José Antonio FerisGuillermo SueldoAutonomist Party [es]32,7220.13
Blank votes882,6593.46
Total25,543,041100.00
Valid votes25,543,04198.77
Invalid/blank votes318,0091.23
Total votes25,861,050100.00
Registered voters/turnout33,871,83276.35
Source: Padron,[13] DINE[14]

President

[edit]
Most voted party by winner strength.

Fernández owed his victory mostly toBuenos Aires Province swinging over dramatically to support him; he carried it by over 1.6 million votes over Macri, accounting for almost all of his nationwide margin of 2.1 million votes. By comparison,Daniel Scioli only carried the province by 219,000 votes in 2015.

CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
Alberto FernándezCristina Fernández de KirchnerFrente de Todos12,946,03748.24
Mauricio MacriMiguel Ángel PichettoJuntos por el Cambio10,811,58640.28
Roberto LavagnaJuan Manuel UrtubeyFederal Consensus1,649,3226.15
Nicolás del CañoRomina Del PláWorkers' Left Front579,2282.16
Juan José Gómez CenturiónCynthia HottonNOS457,9561.71
José Luis EspertLuis RosalesUnite por la Libertad y la Dignidad394,2071.47
Total26,838,336100.00
Valid votes26,838,33697.50
Invalid votes252,3880.92
Blank votes434,3791.58
Total votes27,525,103100.00
Registered voters/turnout34,231,89580.41
Source: Padron,[13] DINE[15]

Results by district

[edit]
ProvinceFernández/Kirchner
(FdT)
Macri/Pichetto
(JxC)
Lavagna/Urtubey
(CF)
Del Caño/del Plá
(FIT–U)
G. Centurión/Hotton
(NOS)
Espert/Rosales
(UNITE)
Blanks/InvalidTurnoutMargin
Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Votes%
Buenos Aires5,294,87952.203,640,55235.89638,9906.30273,4952.70150,0671.48145,7431.43230,7672.2210,374,49382.191,654,32716.31
Buenos Aires City719,65535.461,068,13452.64130,4756.4359,0662.9113,8630.6838,0131.8746,2282.232,075,43476.85-348,479-17.18
Catamarca132,59056.6679,56834.0013,1975.643,5081.502,1360.913,0111.2924,9419.63258,95181.0453,02222.66
Chaco404,75855.73258,43235.5827,6363.816,9860.9620,6172.847,8561.0811,3701.54737,65577.61146,32620.15
Chubut174,72652.4297,83729.3525,3577.6113,1173.9414,2534.288,0292.4014,2894.11347,60877.7876,88923.07
Córdoba666,44529.311,394,10461.31113,7345.0037,6121.6531,8691.4030,2131.3368,4892.932,342,46679.01-727,659-32.00
Corrientes354,96851.19290,69041.9221,6583.126,5220.9412,5151.807,0441.0213,4271.90706,82480.7564,2789.27
Entre Ríos390,58744.37391,49544.4755,0306.2514,5041.6514,6471.6614,1111.6014,5761.63894,95080.59-908-0.10
Formosa229,77465.21100,28028.4611,0573.143,1120.885,3341.512,7970.795,1371.44357,49177.75129,49436.75
Jujuy207,12046.19186,10441.5026,8355.989,2142.0510,5122.348,6171.928,7141.91457,11681.7921,0164.69
La Pampa115,09550.0786,74437.7415,1376.594,7272.064,6762.033,4711.513,6651.57233,51581.2528,35112.33
La Rioja85,77947.3780,46244.437,8444.332,1271.172,0871.152,8011.5552,96422.63234,06480.785,3172.94
Mendoza435,31337.83576,49350.1075,4486.5626,3152.2922,7151.9714,3701.2523,9022.031,174,55681.10-141,180-12.27
Misiones417,75257.71245,25433.8824,4513.386,7040.9321,2392.938,5371.1818,5512.50742,48879.90172,49823.83
Neuquén194,20547.73151,93937.3425,6286.3015,2093.7411,7432.898,1672.0120,0184.72426,90983.9442,26610.39
Río Negro247,66457.23123,67428.5827,4836.3511,2522.6014,1733.288,4821.9619,4314.30452,15980.35123,99028.65
Salta374,36948.82266,40634.7482,35810.7413,6251.7816,6352.1713,3781.7417,6082.24784,37976.11107,96314.08
San Juan242,06053.01160,44935.1433,0047.236,9281.528,3881.845,7591.268,3411.79464,92982.4481,61117.87
San Luis129,11841.68139,47945.0320,9546.767,1712.327,6832.485,3541.738,0762.54317,83581.53-10,361-3.35
Santa Cruz108,32359.7751,18328.249,1235.036,0323.335,1712.851,4020.777,6494.05188,88374.7357,14031.53
Santa Fe920,20242.68937,61143.49193,6038.9830,8621.4333,2471.5440,3531.8743,6621.992,199,54079.48-17,409-0.81
Santiago del Estero451,08274.95110,52518.3720,1033.345,7550.969,2201.535,1230.859,9241.62611,73280.45340,55756.58
Tierra del Fuego57,88756.9326,52926.097,7857.662,7602.713,9253.862,8032.763,2083.06104,89775.8831,35830.84
Tucumán591,68657.76347,64233.9442,4324.1412,5981.2321,2412.078,7730.8617,8011.711,042,17382.84244,04423.82
Total12,946,03748.2410,811,58640.281,649,3226.14579,2282.16457,9561.71394,2071.47686,7672.5227,525,10380.412,134,5017.96

Chamber of Deputies

[edit]
Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Frente de Todos11,606,41145.2664112
Juntos por el Cambio10,347,60540.3656119
Federal ConsensusFederal Consensus1,178,6274.6035
Socialist Party90,7190.3502
Union for Salta83,6330.3300
Protector Political Force74,1380.2901
Generation for a National Encounter25,2460.1000
Social Pole Movement22,6360.0900
Freemen of the South Movement18,5850.0700
Authentic Renewal Front6,8580.0300
Total1,500,4425.8538
Workers' Left FrontWorkers' Left Front742,1282.8902
Workers' Socialist Movement19,6710.0800
Workers' Party3,6510.0100
Total765,4502.9902
We Do for Córdoba377,8441.4714
Civic Front for Santiago326,5661.2736
Front for the Renewal of Concord191,8760.7513
Together We Are Río Negro121,4780.4711
Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad113,8120.4400
NOSRepublican Force55,7130.2200
Conservative People's Party22,0480.0900
Acción Chaqueña [es]21,1730.0800
Citizens to Govern Party12,9760.0500
Total111,9100.4400
Neuquén People's Movement78,3420.3101
Encuentro Vecinal Córdoba [es]44,6420.1700
Self-determination and Freedom24,6850.1000
Let's All Live Better17,9920.0711
Independent Party of Chubut5,1720.0200
Patagonian Social Party4,7270.0200
Partido Es Posible [es]2,1810.0100
Total25,641,135100.00130257
Valid votes25,641,13593.20
Invalid votes274,3221.00
Blank votes1,596,1105.80
Total votes27,511,567100.00
Registered voters/turnout34,231,89580.37
Source: Padron,[13] DINE[15]

Results by province

[edit]
ProvinceFdTJxCCFOthers
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Buenos Aires5,113,35952.64193,668,58037.7714583,6996.012348,5013.59
Buenos Aires City641,05432.0541,060,40453.028114,9685.75183,6659.18
Catamarca133,32761.32173,57833.84110,5164.84
Chaco397,47256.702255,52836.45126,7783.8221,1733.02
Chubut160,99653.45297,24532.29122,6367.5220,3276.75
Córdoba495,82322.3121,140,33851.32679,0983.56506,73222.811
Corrientes336,44850.982290,46344.01220,1203.0512,9761.97
Entre Ríos380,61445.202384,96845.72256,7866.7419,6712.34
Formosa225,60867.01299,30529.49111,7803.50
Jujuy189,30545.402180,87743.38129,0306.9617,7214.25
La Pampa114,07951.63187,04939.40114,6276.625,1972.35
La Rioja70,56452.18260,49844.7314,1793.09
Mendoza423,00237.992583,89752.44374,1386.6632,3432.90
Misiones234,40434.942225,23233.58119,3062.88191,87628.601
Neuquén137,28536.391123,38632.70117,6024.6799,02526.25
Río Negro170,93545.10271,94918.98136,10735.911
Salta328,96646.682244,22534.65283,63311.8747,9206.80
San Juan239,42654.792167,67238.37129,8676.84
San Luis126,59243.871134,66846.67118,6226.458,7013.02
Santa Cruz96,65862.13245,58629.306,8584.416,4744.16
Santa Fe890,56142.264912,40743.305210,77310.00193,3584.43
Santiago del Estero125,60921.881103,41118.0118,5853.24326,56656.883
Tierra del Fuego33,87838.67120,74723.6816,6247.5626,37030.101
Tucumán540,44655.253315,59232.26244,3964.5477,7957.95
Total11,606,41145.266410,347,60540.36561,500,4425.8532,186,6778.537

Senate

[edit]
Party or allianceVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Frente de Todos2,263,22140.161339
Juntos por el Cambio2,210,31039.22828
Federal ConsensusFederal Consensus159,2712.8300
Union for Salta85,6011.5200
Socialist Party56,6061.0000
Freemen of the South Movement18,3440.3300
Generation for a National Encounter8,1440.1400
Total327,9665.8200
Workers' Left FrontWorkers' Left Front140,7922.5000
Workers' Socialist Movement18,7180.3300
Workers' Party2,8150.0500
Total162,3252.8800
Civic Front for Santiago328,6275.8322
Together We Are Río Negro153,3382.7211
Neuquén People's Movement85,6171.5200
NOSConservative People's Party22,3050.4000
Acción Chaqueña [es]21,1910.3800
Total43,4960.7700
Unite por la Libertad y la Dignidad38,9700.6900
Let's All Live Better17,2100.3100
Patagonian Social Party4,8260.0900
Federal Peronism01
Front for the Renewal of Concord01
Total5,635,906100.002472
Valid votes5,635,90692.64
Invalid votes64,4631.06
Blank votes383,0316.30
Total votes6,083,400100.00
Registered voters/turnout7,772,50078.27
Source: Padron,[13] DINE[15]

Results by province

[edit]
ProvinceFdTJxCCFOthers
Votes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Buenos Aires City679,56934.0811,076,45253.992114,9075.76122,8926.16
Chaco400,18856.982254,21536.19126,7663.8121,1913.02
Entre Ríos383,23845.471384,30045.59256,6066.7218,7182.22
Neuquén136,35035.662123,49032.30117,5984.60104,93627.44
Río Negro169,72650.382167,18149.621
Salta330,32446.552247,69934.91185,60112.0646,0136.48
Santiago del Estero126,41321.911103,58117.9518,3443.18328,62756.962
Tierra del Fuego37,41341.12220,57322.6118,1448.9524,85127.31
Total2,263,22140.16132,210,31039.228327,9665.820834,40914.813

Provincial elections

[edit]
DateDistrictOfficesWinnerRunner-up
10 MarchNeuquénGovernor

Vice Governor

35 provincial deputies

Omar Gutiérrez - Marcos Koopmann

(Neuquén People's Movement)

(40,19 %)

Ramón Rioseco -Darío Martínez

(Neuquin Front–Citizens' Unity)

(25,93 %)

7 AprilRío NegroGovernor

Vice Governor

46 provincial deputies

Arabela Carreras - Alejandro Palmieri

(Together We Are Río Negro)

(52,63 %)

Martín Soria -Magdalena Odarda

(Front for Victory)

(34,97 %)

12 MayCórdobaGovernor

Vice Governor

70 provincial deputies

Juan Schiaretti - Manuel Calvo

(We Do for Córdoba)

(57,38 %)

Mario Negri -Héctor Baldassi

(Córdoba Changes)

(18,85 %)

19 MayLa PampaGovernor

Vice Governor

30 provincial deputies

Sergio Ziliotto - Mariano Fernández

(La Pampa Justicialist Front)

(52,68 %)

Daniel Kroneberger - Luis Evangelista

(Cambiemos La Pampa)

(31,80 %)

2 JuneMisionesGovernor

Vice Governor

20 provincial deputies

Oscar Herrera Ahuad - Carlos Omar Arce

(Front for the Renewal of Concord)

(72,81 %)

Humberto Schiavoni - Luis Mario Pastori

(Together for Change)

(17,59 %)

San JuanGovernor

Vice Governor

36 provincial deputies

Sergio Uñac - Roberto Gattoni

(Everyone Front)

(55,84 %)

Marcelo Orrego - Susana Laciar

(Front with You)

(33,91 %)

9 JuneChubutGovernor

Vice Governor

27 provincial deputies

Mariano Arcioni - Ricardo Sastre

(Chubut Ahead)

(41,35 %)

Carlos Linares - Claudia Bard

(Chubut Patriotic Front)

(33,97 %)

Entre RíosGovernor

Vice Governor

34 provincial deputies

17 provincial senators

Gustavo Bordet -María Laura Stratta

(Believe Entre Ríos)

(57,43 %)

Atilio Benedetti -Gustavo Hein

(Cambiemos)

(35,57 %)

JujuyGovernor

Vice Governor

24 provincial deputies

Gerardo Morales - Carlos Haquim

(Change Jujuy)

(43,76 %)

Julio Ferreyra - Adrián Mendieta

(Justicialist Front)

(32,77 %)

TucumánGovernor

Vice Governor

49 provincial deputies

Juan Luis Manzur - Osvaldo Jaldo

(Justicialist Front for Tucumán)

(51,86 %)

Silvia Elías de Pérez - José Manuel Paz

(Let's Go Tucumán)

(20,41 %)

16 JuneFormosaGovernor

Vice Governor

15 provincial deputies

Gildo Insfrán - Eber Wilson Solís

(Justicialist Party)

(70,66 %)

Adrián Bogado - Iván Nicolás Kaluk

(Formosan Broad Front)

(28,89 %)

San LuisGovernor

Vice Governor

21 provincial deputies

5 provincial senators

Alberto Rodríguez Saá - Eduardo Mones Ruiz

(Justicialist Unity)

(42,34 %)

Claudio Poggi - Enrique Ariel Ponce

(United San Luis)

(34,54 %)

Santa FeGovernor

Vice Governor

50 provincial deputies

19 provincial senators

Omar Perotti -Alejandra Rodenas

(Together Front)

(42,31 %)

Antonio Bonfatti - María Victoria Tejeda

(Progressive, Civic and Social Front)

(37,91 %)

Tierra del FuegoGovernor

Vice Governor

15 provincial deputies

Gustavo Melella -Mónica Urquiza

(FORJA)

(55,03 %)

Rosana Bertone - Juan Carlos Arcando

(Fueguin Unity)

(40,86 %)

11 AugustSanta CruzGovernor

Vice Governor

24 provincial deputies

Alicia Kirchner - Eugenio Quiroga

(Santacruzean Accord)

(58,59%)

Eduardo Costa - Liliana Andrade

(To get out ahead)

(32,03%)

29 SeptemberMendozaGovernor

Vice Governor

24 provincial deputies

19 provincial senators

Rodolfo Suárez - Mario Abed

(Change Mendoza)

(51,63%)

Anabel Fernández Sagasti - Jorge Tanus

(Choose Mendoza)

(36,21%)

13 OctoberChacoGovernor

Vice Governor

16 provincial deputies

Jorge Capitanich -Analía Rach Quiroga

(Chaqueño Front)

(49,32%)

Carim Peche -Roy Nikisch

(We Are All Chaco)

(31,40%)

27 OctoberBuenos Aires
(in detail)
Governor

Vice Governor

46 provincial deputies

23 provincial senators

Axel Kicillof -Verónica Magario

(Everyone's Front)

(52,28%)

María Eugenia Vidal - Daniel Salvador

(Together for Change)

(38,39%)

CatamarcaGovernor

Vice Governor

20 provincial deputies

8 provincial senators

Raúl Jalil - Rubén Dusso

(Everyone's Front)

(60,40%)

Roberto Gómez - Lía Quiroga

(Together for Change)

(33,46%)

Buenos Aires City
(in detail)
Chief of Government

Vice Chief of Government

30 legislators

Horacio Rodríguez Larreta -Diego Santilli

(Together for Change)

(55,90%)

Matías Lammens -Gisela Marziotta

(Everyone's Front)

(35,06%)

La RiojaGovernor

Vice Governor

18 provincial deputies

Ricardo Quintela -Florencia López

(Everyone's Front)

(40,84%)

Julio Martínez -Teresita Luna

(Together for La Rioja)

(27,90%)

10 NovemberSaltaGovernor

Vice Governor

30 provincial deputies

11 provincial senators

Gustavo Sáenz - Antonio Marocco

(Sáenz Governor Front)

(53,85%)

Sergio Leavy - Emiliano Estrada

(Everyone's Front)

(26,00%)

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Calendario electoral 2019: las fechas del cronograma, provincia por provincia".La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved24 June 2019.
  2. ^"Reuters TV - Live".Reuters TV. Archived fromthe original on October 28, 2019. RetrievedOct 29, 2019.
  3. ^David Hodari (23 October 2015)."Argentina elections 2015: a guide to the parties, polls and electoral system".The Guardian. Retrieved3 November 2015.
  4. ^abChamber of Deputies: Electoral systemArchived 31 October 2013 at theWayback Machine IPU
  5. ^Voto de los Jóvenes de 16 y 17 años0Archived 2017-03-30 at theWayback Machine Camara Nacional Electoral
  6. ^Regúnaga, Carlos (22 October 2007)."CSIS Hemisphere Focus"(PDF).The Argentine Elections: Systems and Candidates. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 1 May 2015. Retrieved22 April 2016.
  7. ^Argentine Republic: Election for Senado (Senate) IFES
  8. ^"Cierre de listas electorales: todos los candidatos para las elecciones 2019".La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved24 June 2019.
  9. ^"Mirá las boletas de los principales candidatos en Argentina".Infobae (in Spanish). 23 June 2019. Retrieved24 June 2019.
  10. ^"Qué son las PASO".Infobae (in Spanish). 9 April 2019. Retrieved29 December 2020.
  11. ^González, Enric (12 August 2019)."Victoria abrumadora del peronismo en las primarias argentinas".El País (in Spanish). Retrieved29 December 2020.
  12. ^"PASO 2019: Los resultados de las elecciones en todo el país".Clarín (in Spanish). 12 August 2019. Retrieved29 December 2020.
  13. ^abcd"Consulta de Escrutinios Definitivos".www.padron.gob.ar.
  14. ^"ACORDADA EXTRAORDINARIA NÚMERO SESENTA Y UNO"(PDF).Cámara Nacional Electoral. 3 September 2019.
  15. ^abc"Dirección Nacional Electoral - Elecciones 2019".www.argentina.gob.ar.
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