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Argentine general election, 2003

Argentine general election, 2003
Argentina
← 1999 April 27, 2003 2007 →
  Néstor Kirchner (2005).jpg Menem 1999.jpg López Murphy 2000.jpg
Nominee Néstor Kirchner Carlos Menem Ricardo López Murphy
Party Justicialist Party Justicialist Party Recreate for Growth
Alliance Front for Victory Front for Loyalty Recreate Federal Movement
Home state Santa Cruz La Rioja Buenos Aires
Running mate Daniel Scioli Juan Carlos Romero Ricardo Gómez Diez
States carried 8 12 1 (CABA)
Popular vote 4,312,517 4,740,907 3,173,475
Percentage 22.2% 24.5%
(forfeited)
16.4%

Mapa de las elecciones presidenciales de 2003.png

President before election

Eduardo Duhalde
Justicialist Party

Elected President

Néstor Kirchner
Justicialist Party


Eduardo Duhalde
Justicialist Party

Néstor Kirchner
Justicialist Party

Argentina held presidential and parliamentary elections on Sunday, April 27, 2003. Turnout was 78.2%. No one presidential candidate gained enough votes to win outright, but the scheduled runoff was canceled when first-round winner Carlos Menem pulled out, handing the presidency to runner-up Néstor Kirchner.

For the first time since the return of democracy in 1983, the Justicialist Party (PJ) failed to agree on a single presidential candidate. Three credible Peronist candidates ran in the election: center-right former President Carlos Menem, center-left Santa Cruz Province Governor Néstor Kirchner, and centrist San Luis Province Former president Adolfo Rodríguez Saá. None were officially supported by the party, though President Eduardo Duhalde publicly endorsed Governor Kirchner on January 15, 2003. The PJ suspended its January 24 convention, opting to allow the three contenders to run on the Peronist mantle. None of the candidates were allowed to use the traditional Peronist iconography in detriment of the others.

For the first time since 1916, the UCR did not field a presidential candidate. After the political collapse at the peak of the economic crisis that led to the resignation of President Fernando de la Rúa at the end of 2001, popular support for the UCR was at historically low levels. Two strong former members of the UCR founded parties based on their politics: Congresswoman Elisa Carrió founded a left-of-center party, the ARI, and economist Ricardo López Murphy founded a right-wing one, Recrear.


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