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President, all 109Deputies and 27Senators in theNational Congress | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Registered | 104,612 | |||||||||||||||||||
| Turnout | 64.54% | |||||||||||||||||||
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General elections were held inBolivia on 10 March 1940, electing both a newPresident of the Republic and a newNational Congress. The elections were the first in six years since1934 and the first not to be annulled in nine years since thegeneral election of 1931.[1]
Since 1936, Bolivia had experienced aleft-wing shift in government under theMilitary Socialist regimes ofDavid Toro andGermán Busch. This period came to an end when Busch committedsuicide on 23 August 1939, four months after dissolving theassembly and declaring himself dictator. Immediately following the death of Busch, thearmed forces appointed GeneralCarlos Quintanilla, the commander-in-chief of the army, to the office of president. Quintanilla soon set about reversing course on the more radical elements of the previous governments and returning the country to the conservative status quo prior to theChaco War.
Though Quintanilla attempted to exercise a longer government, the prolonged indecision to call elections was met by opposition from the traditional political parties which sought to reassert themselves for the first time since thecoup d'état which deposed them in 1936. Among the voices demanding elections was GeneralEnrique Peñaranda who declared to the press that the country urgently needed "direct general elections to be called."[2] Finally, a group of representatives from theLiberal (PL),Genuine Republican (PRG), andSocialist Republican (PRG), parties addressed President Quintanilla with the warning that "Deferring for a longer time, without valid reasons, [...] the call for direct elections, will lead public opinion to the conviction that their participation in the electoral plebiscite will only serve to consolidate and legalize public powers [...] and that, therefore, will not be the authentic expression of the popular will."[2]
Given the pressure, Quintanilla put out the call on 6 October 1939, over a month after taking power, for new elections for president and vice president to be held on 10 March 1940.[3] However, only elections for president would occur as on 4 December 1939 the office of vice president was abolished in order to silence calls forEnrique Baldivieso, the former vice president to Germán Busch, to succeed to the presidency.[4]
To secure their chances at victory, the PL, PRG, and PRS consolidated into theConcordanceelectoral alliance.[5] General Enrique Peñaranda, one of the nearest approximations to a war hero produced by the Chaco War, was brought forth as the coalition's presidential candidate.[5] Peñaranda had been a member of the senior officer corps which after the Chaco War was forced to step aside in favor of the younger generation of officers represented by Germán Busch.
These young officers presented as their presidential candidate GeneralBernardino Bilbao Rioja, the new commander-in-chief of the army who represented the Military Socialist ideology of Toro and the deceased Busch.[6] Attempts by the mining oligarchy and the traditional parties to discredit Bilbao as a despot attempting to promulgate a leftist dictatorship were unsuccessful.[2] Faced with the possibility that Bilbao could conceivably win, the Quintanilla government summoned him to thegovernment palace where he was beaten, gagged, and deported toArica,Chile.[6] Though Bilbao's return was negotiated under threat of a military revolt from the young officers, he was sent directly from exile toLondon as amilitary attaché, removing him from circulation as a viable candidate.
As a result, Peñaranda's main electoral opposition came fromJosé Antonio Arze. One of the primarysociologists andMarxist theorists in Bolivia, Arze had just that year returned from exile in Chile, having proven too far left even for the Military Socialist regime of David Toro which deported him in September 1936.[7] In April 1939, while still in Chile, Arze had formed the Bolivian Left Front (FIB), publishing a manifesto naming the FIB a union of the entire left-wing political spectrum. Despite this, the FIB maintained distinctly Marxist characteristics. For the 1940 elections, Arze ran as anindependent as part of the FIB alliance.[8]
Given the suppression of the electoral opposition, Peñaranda and the Concordance coalition won the 10 March elections easily with a popular vote margin of 85.99% to Arze's 11.32% and just 2.69% in favor of Bilbao. Despite the clear victory, the second place success of Arze at almost 15% indicated continued support for the left-wing in Bolivia and paved the way for the FIB to form theRevolutionary Left Party (PIR), one of the most influential leftist parties in 1940s Bolivia, five months later.[9][7]
Peñaranda was inaugurated as constitutional president on 15 April 1940.[10]
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrique Peñaranda | Concordance | 58,060 | 85.99 | |
| José Antonio Arze | Bolivian Left Front | 7,645 | 11.32 | |
| Bernardino Bilbao Rioja | Independent | 1,813 | 2.69 | |
| Total | 67,518 | 100.00 | ||
| Registered voters/turnout | 104,612 | – | ||
| Source: Gamboa[11] | ||||
Despite Peñaranda's wide margin of victory, the legislative results were much closer. Right-wing parties (the traditional Liberals (PL), Genuine Republicans (PRG), and Socialist Republicans (PRS), as well as theRadical Party (PR) and affiliated independents, including those associated with theBolivian Socialist Falange (FSB)) won 61 seats in the Chamber and 23 in the Senate. Left-wing parties (theUnited Socialist Party (PSU), theIndependent Socialist Party (PSI, a precursor to theRevolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR)), thePopular Front of Potosí (FPP), theWorkers Socialist Party (PSOB), and affiliated independents) won 48 seats in the Chamber and four in the Senate.
As such, while conservatives held a large majority in theChamber of Senators, their lead of just 13 seats in theChamber of Deputies was much narrower. The relative success of the left-wing parties in the legislative elections compared to the presidential elections showed that many Bolivian citizens, while perhaps not as far left as theCommunist International affiliated coalition of José Antonio Arze, still supported left-wing policies.
| Party | Votes | % | Seats | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deputies | Senators | |||||||
| Liberal Party | 21 | 9 | ||||||
| United Socialist Party | 18 | 4 | ||||||
| Genuine Republican Party | 17 | 3 | ||||||
| Independent Socialist Party | 15 | 0 | ||||||
| Socialist Republican Party | 12 | 11 | ||||||
| Left-wing independents | 10 | 0 | ||||||
| Right-wing independents | 9 | 0 | ||||||
| Popular Front of Potosí | 4 | 0 | ||||||
| Radical Party | 1 | 0 | ||||||
| FSB independents | 1 | 0 | ||||||
| Workers Socialist Party of Bolivia | 1 | 0 | ||||||
| Total | 109 | 27 | ||||||
| Registered voters/turnout | 104,612 | – | ||||||
| Source: Bustillos & Peñaranda[12] | ||||||||
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