Argentinaportal |
Part of a series on Orders of succession |
Presidencies |
---|
The Argentine presidential line of succession is the order in which officials may assume the office of the president of Argentina in the case of vacancy due to illness, death, resignation or impeachment (as a final consequence of a trial in the Chamber of Deputies and subsequent indictment and sentencing by the Senate).
The line of succession is specified by the Constitution of Argentina, Article 88, as well as the Law of Presidential Acephaly No. 25,716 (itself an amendment of Law No. 20,972). [1]
The line begins with the vice president, who would finish the remainder of the term. If the vice president were to be impeded as well, the temporary line of succession would be as follows: the provisional president of the Senate, followed by the president of the Chamber of Deputies, and finally the president of the Supreme Court of Justice. The successor would exercise the responsibilities of the presidential office until the cause of the incapacity has ceased, or a new president is elected by the Legislative Assembly.
Presidential line of succession | |
---|---|
1. | Vice president |
2. | Provisional president of the Senate |
3. | President of the Chamber of Deputies |
4. | President of the Supreme Court |
Article 88: In case of sickness, absence from the Capital, death, resignation or destitution of the President, the Executive Power shall be exercised by the vice president of the Nation. In case of death or incapacity of the president and vice president of the Nation, Congress shall determine which public official must exercise the presidency, until the cause of the incapacity has ceased or a new president is elected.
— Section II. Of the Executive Branch. First chapter. Of its nature and duration. Constitution of the Argentine Nation (1994)
Article 153: In the case of death or resignation of either of the elected candidates that were proclaimed, what is declared in article 88 of the National Constitution shall be carried out. Article 154: In the case of death of either of the two candidates who received the most votes in the first round and before the second round is carried out, a new election shall be carried out.
— Title VII. National Electoral System. Chapter I. Of the election of the President and Vice President of the Nation. National Electoral Code
During the Paraguayan War (1865–1870), then president Bartolomé Mitre headed the Argentinean troops, delegating the office to his vice president Marcos Paz. Paz died on 2 January 1868 due to a cholera epidemic affecting Buenos Aires at that time, leaving the office vacant since president Mitre could not return immediately. As no law on the subject was in place, Ministers Guillermo Rawson (Interior), Juan Andrés Gelly y Obes (War), Marcelino Ugarte (Foreign Affairs), Lucas González (Taxation) and José Evaristo Uriburu (Justice) assumed the office transitorily. [3]
Because of this situation, Congress sanctioned law 252 of 19 September 1868, thereby defining the order of succession: Upon vacancy of the president and vice president, the office will be assumed firstly by the provisional president of the Senate, and if they were unable, by the president of the Chamber of Deputies, and if missing both, the president of the Supreme Court of Justice, who shall invoke national elections within 30 days and hand over command to the president-elect to finish the remaining term. [4]
This law was superseded by law 20,972 of 11 July 1975, which maintained the order of succession but replaced the call to national elections with a session of the Legislative Assembly (Deputies and Senate, with a quorum of two-thirds) within 48 hours following the vacancy of the office. The successor shall choose the new president by absolute majority from within the present Senators, Deputies and Governors to finish the term. [5] This law was modified by law 25,716 of 28 November 2002, introducing the possibility that the president-elect and vice president-elect take office if elections have taken place. [6]
The law was first applied on 29 March 1962. Then president Arturo Frondizi was deposed by the armed forces and imprisoned. [7] [8] After the coup, the military commanders failed to agree on the next steps. [9] Supreme Court Judge Julio C. Oyhanarte and Minister of Defense Rodolfo Martínez took advantage of this deadlock, thinking of a legal path to maintain democracy and, with the office of the vice president also vacant after the resignation of Alejandro Gómez in November 1958, [10] convoked José María Guido, provisional president of the Senate, to the Palace of Justice to take the oath of office and avoid a coup d'état. [11]
An application of the law as intended did not occur until between December 2001 and January 2002, a period known in Argentina as the "five-president week". [12] On 21 December 2001, then president Fernando de la Rúa resigned amidst a deep economic crisis, violent riots, police violence and a lack of support from his party, the Unión Cívica Radical, as well as from the opposition, the Justicialist Party, to form a coalition government. [13] As the vice presidency was also vacant due to Carlos Álvarez's resignation in October 2000, [14] provisional president of the Senate, Federico Ramón Puerta, assumed the presidency temporarily and summoned the Legislative Assembly on 23 December, when governor of San Luis Adolfo Rodríguez Saá was elected by 169 votes for to 138 against, and elections were invoked for 3 March 2002. [15]
Rodríguez Saá announced a default on external debt and the creation of a new currency, the Argentino, but on 30 December, after a failed meeting with governors in Chapadmalal, he traveled to his home province and resigned from office. [16] The next day Puerta also resigned from the office of provisional president of the Senate, [17] and the president of the Chamber of Deputies, Eduardo Camaño, assumed the presidency temporarily. Camaño again summoned the Legislative Assembly on 1 January 2002 to accept Rodríguez Saá's resignation and elect a new president. Senator Eduardo Duhalde was subsequently elected by 262 votes for, 21 against and 18 abstentions, and served until 10 December 2003. Duhalde announced the end of the peso-dollar pegging and the flexibilization of the corralito , raising the exchange limit from 200 pesos to 1,000 pesos a month. [18] [19]
Eduardo Alberto Duhalde is an Argentine former peronist politician who served as the interim President of Argentina from January 2002 to May 2003. He also served as Vice President and Governor of Buenos Aires in the 1990s.
The president of Argentina is both head of state and head of government of Argentina. Under the national constitution, the president is also the chief executive of the federal government and commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Adolfo Rodríguez-Saá is an Argentine Peronist politician. Born in a family that was highly influential in the history of the San Luis Province, he became the province's governor in 1983, after the end of the National Reorganization Process military dictatorship. He remained governor up to 2001, being re-elected in successive elections.
José María Guido Cibeira was President of Argentina from 29 March 1962 to 12 October 1963, serving as the head of a provisional civilian government after the Argentine military overthrew President Arturo Frondizi. Guido's nineteen months in office were characterized by a severe economic recession, open conflict between competing factions within the armed forces, and anti-democratic measures including continued proscription of Peronists from Argentine politics. Yet Guido, with critical support from the "legalist" faction of the military, prevailed in his mission to return Argentina to constitutional government with a general election held on 7 July 1963.
José Juan Bautista Pampuro was an Argentine politician of the Justicialist Party. He served as Defense Minister under President Kirchner and also as senator for Buenos Aires Province. From 2006 to 2011 he was the Provisional President of the Senate.
Aníbal Domingo Fernández is an Argentine Justicialist Party politician, lawyer, and certified public accountant. Throughout his career, he has remained a close ally to the former Presidents Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. Between 2021 and 2023, he served as Argentina's Minister of Security in the cabinet of President Alberto Fernández.
Isaac Francisco Rojas Madariaga was an Argentine Admiral of the Navy and de facto Vice President of Argentina. He joined the Argentine Navy and had an unremarkable career until the 1946 election of Juan Perón.
The order of precedence in Argentina is a symbolic hierarchy of officials used to direct protocol. It is regulated by Presidential Decree 2072 of 10 October 1993, signed by then President Carlos Menem, and former ministers Guido di Tella and Carlos Ruckauf.
The Argentine general election of 1963 was held on 7 July. Voters chose both the President and their legislators; with a turnout of 85.6%, resulting in the election of Arturo Illia as President of Argentina.
Juan Carlos Maqueda is an Argentine lawyer, politician, and a member of the Supreme Court of Justice of Argentina since 2002. As Provisional President of the Argentine Senate in 2001 and 2002, he chaired two legislative assemblies to elect a new President of Argentina during the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression and was acting President in the absence of the President.
In Argentina, there were seven coups d'état during the 20th century: in 1930, 1943, 1955, 1962, 1966, 1976, and 1981. The first four established interim dictatorships, while the fifth and sixth established dictatorships of permanent type on the model of a bureaucratic-authoritarian state. The latter two conducted a Dirty War in the line of state terrorism, in which human rights were systematically violated and there were tens of thousands of forced disappearances.
General elections were held in Argentina on Sunday, 23 October 2011. Incumbent president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of the Front for Victory won in a landslide, with 54% of the vote, securing a second term in office. The Front for Victory won just over half of the seats in the National Congress. As of 2023, this marked the last time the vice president-elect was not a woman.
Federal Peronism, also known as Dissident Peronism, is the faction or branch of either moderate, centrist or right-wing Peronism, that is currently identified mostly by its opposition to Kirchnerism, the left-wing faction of Peronism.
Alejandro Gómez was an Argentine educator and lawyer who served as the Vice President of Argentina.
The Uruguayan presidential line of succession is the set order in which officials of the Uruguayan government assume the office of head of state if the incumbent President of Uruguay becomes incapacitated, dies in office, resigns, or is removed from office. The line of succession is set out in Article 153 of the Uruguayan Constitution and follows the order of the Vice President and the Senator of the list most voted for of the political party by which they were elected.
Graciela María Giannettasio de Saiegh was an Argentine politician belonging to the Justicialist Party. She served in a number of high-profile posts during her career, most notably as Minister of Education during the interim presidency of Eduardo Duhalde from 2002 to 2003, and later as Vice Governor of Buenos Aires Province under Felipe Solá from 2003 to 2007.