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Topic: Partido Justicialista


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In the News (Tue 29 Dec 09)

  
  Justicialist Party (Argentina)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Partido Justicialista has its roots in Juan Domingo Perón, back in 1940s.
Partido Justicialista is the main group of the Peronism (center right).
The Partido Justicialista (also called "Justicialismo" or "Peronismo") was founded in the 1940s by Juan Domingo Perón.
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/ar}jus.html   (1082 words)

  
 YourArt.com >> Encyclopedia >> Peronism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
A third way approach to economics which purported to be neither socialist nor capitalist, but to incorporate elements of both in a corporativist manner, resembling a kind of state capitalism.
Perón's party, the Partido Justicialista, derived its name from the Spanish words for justice and social.
Perón's ideas were widely embraced by a variety of different groups in Argentina across the political spectrum.
www.yourart.com /research/encyclopedia.cgi?subject=/Peronism   (508 words)

  
 Sector Report:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The main Government party is the: Partido Justicialista and its main opposition are the: Union Civica Radical (UCR), Frente del Pais Solidario (Frepaso); and other minor parties include Affirmation para una Republica Igualitaria (ARI), Movimiento Federal Recrear (MFR) and several provincial parties.
The current president is Nestor Kirchner of the Partido Justicialista, who was sworn in as president on May 25th 2003.
Party politics in Argentina have usually been bipartisan—the Partido Justicialista (PJ, known as the Peronists) and the Unión Cívica Radical (UCR, the Radicals) have dominated politics since 1946.
sociology.ucdavis.edu /djkyle/soc145a/argentina-poli.htm   (1277 words)

  
 [IMC-Print] News from the portland.indymedia.org:8081 newswire
It became clear that this was not a protest simply against one or another particular politician, it was a protest against the Argentine political class as a whole, be it of the Partido Justicialista, or the UCR.
The overwhelming opinion is that we live in a system which is incredibly limited in the options it provides (as there is little of note oustide of the UCR and Partido Justicialista) and that is managed by a political class that is wholly out of touch with the needs of the population it theoretically represents.
The Partido Justicialista, just as much the target of the anger of the people as the UCR, rode to power on the backs of the blood of the Argentine people.
archives.lists.indymedia.org /imc-print/2002-January/005064.html   (6218 words)

  
 Labor Newsletter - Marval, O'Farrell & Mairal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The head of the Senate Budget and Economy Committee, Jorge Capitanich (Partido Justicialista -province of Chaco), stated to the newspaper 'La Nación', "I already have the nine signatures that I need to issue an opinion".
Sources in Congress were coincidental in pointing out that the First Lady had voted against the law when it was passed, in January 2002, and that she had abstained when the economic emergency situation was extended the first time, in November, last year.
On the other hand, the ‘Partido Radical’ has let it be known that they will sign the opinion in partial dissidence.
www.marval.com.ar /english/areas/laboral/2004/octubre/pay.htm   (395 words)

  
 FIU Library -- Internet Resources -- Latin America and the Caribbean   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Formerly the Peronist Party, the Partido Justicialista was outlawed immediately after the fall of Juan D. Perón but, with the restoration of democracy in 1983, was revived and given a more democratic image.
In the election for the Senado, the Partido Justicialista won with 40% (or 40 seats), the Alianza received 23.3% (24 seats for the UCR and 1 seat for the FREPASO), the Partido Humanista came in with 2.6%, the Acción por la República with 2.2%, and the PTS with 0.7%.
It is a member of Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia which won 51.32% of the vote in the 2001 legislative elections (22.84% for the PDC).
weblib.fiu.edu /internet/subjects/caribbean/polparties.html   (11036 words)

  
 Left Party
The Party was renamed Justicialista as part of the negotiations with different military and civilian governments.
From its bourgeois nationalist, populist initial stage (1945-51) it evolved into a more bourgeois mainstream party in a slow and tortuous process, which included long periods of illegality after Peron was overthrown by a military coup in 1955.
This sector of the Peronist movement had a sizable guerrilla movement, controlled the majority of the countrys universities and was a small but significant force in the trade unions of the 1970s.
www.leftparty.org /docARGnotes.html   (5455 words)

  
 Political Resources on the Net - Argentina 1:3
Partido de Trabajadores por el Socialismo Trotskyist Party
Partido Comunista Revolucionario de la Argentina Revolutionary Communist Party
Partido ARI (Afirmación para una Republica Igualitaria) Affirmation for an Egalitarian Republic
www.politicalresources.net /argentina.htm   (256 words)

  
 Argentine political flags
Humanist Party website, with two flag photos here and there.
1990 after some (very few) Justicialistas were dissapointed with then President Menem’s neoliberal politics.
FREPASO used to be an emergent 3rd position party that came to ally with the 2nd force (UCR) some time ago to overthrow the ruling Partido Justicialista.
www.flags-by-swi.com /fotw/flags\ar}.html   (343 words)

  
 NotiSur - Latin American Political Affairs; October 31, 1997
These can be accessed with a subscription to the LADB searchable on-line archives at http://ladb.unm.edu/ by clicking on Search Archive.
With official results not yet in, President Ernesto Samper's Partido Liberal appears to have held a majority of state and local posts.
The party won 19 of 32 governorships, compared with four for the Partido Social Conservador.
ssdc.ucsd.edu /news/notisur/h97/notisur.19971031.html   (3195 words)

  
 Argentina: Angus Reid Consultants   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Trailing by more than 40 per cent in the polls, Menem announced on May 14 that he would not participate in the run-off.
Menem alleged that the presence of two candidates from the peronist Partido Justicialista (PJ—Justicialist Party) defeated the purpose of the election.
Kirchner was sworn in as Argentina's president on May 25.
www.angus-reid.com /tracker/index.cfm?fuseaction=viewItem&itemID=168   (497 words)

  
 Governments on the WWW: Political Parties
Partido de Trabajadores por el Socialismo (PTS) [Party of Workers for the Socialism]
Partido de la Izquierda Nacional de la Argentina [Party of the National Left of Argentina]
Partido Africano da Independência de Cabo Verde (PAICV) [African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde]
www.gksoft.com /govt/en/parties.html   (2433 words)

  
 NotiSur - Latin American Political Affairs; April 15, 1994
A major surprise, however, was the resounding defeat of the opposition Radical Civic Union (Union Civica Radical, UCR), as well as the strong showing by the center- left coalition Broad Front (Frente Grande), which has now emerged as the third political force in the country.
Official results gave the Justicialistas 37.7% of the vote, allowing them 139 delegates, less than an absolute majority in the 305-member Constituent Assembly.
Moscoso was nominated by an alliance of Endara's Arnulfista Party (PA), together with the Authentic Liberal Party (Partido Liberal Autentico, PLA) and the Independent Democratic Union (Union Democratica Independiente, UDI).
ssdc.ucsd.edu /news/notisur/h94/notisur.19940415.html   (7542 words)

  
 [No title]
The Partido Socialista, which originally backed Carrio, is running Deputy Alfredo Bravo, president of the Asamblea Permanente por los Derechos Humanos (APDH).
The UCR, mired in crisis since the resignation of former President Fernando de la Rua (1999-2001) in December 2001, is running Deputy Leopoldo Moreau, while the Democracia Cristiana's candidate is Manuel Herrera, former president of the business chamber Union Industrial Argentina (UIA).
The left, which was unable to come together around one candidate, will have four: Deputy Patricia Walsh of the Izquierda Unida (IU); Jorge Altamira of the Partido Obrero; Guillermo Sullings of the Partido Humanista; and Jorge Mazitelli of the Partido Socialista Autentico.
retanet.unm.edu /LADB-articles/25267.html   (1934 words)

  
 AIPEnet - Excelencia en el periodismo
BUENOS AIRES (AIPE).- El Partido Justicialista del presidente Carlos Saúl Menem puede ser considerado triunfador en las recientes elecciones argentinas para designar diputados y gobernadores de provincia, a pocos meses de haber descendido significativamente en el aprecio popular a causa de tantos escándalos familiares.
En cuanto a los resultados de estas dos provincias norteñas, marcan el triunfo de dos partidos liderados por ex gobernadores de la dictadura militar de Jorge Rafael Videla, que han sido vistos por el electorado como "administradores eficientes".
Pero fue en su provincia, donde a pesar de ganar el oficialismo, hasta última hora no se sabía cuál de las dos corrientes de su partido se quedaría con la gobernación.
www.aipenet.com /Indice/article.asp?Articulo_Id=385   (430 words)

  
 [No title]
Next Senate : PJ (Partido Justicialista/Justicialist Party) 39 ; (Alianza/Aliance) 26 ; MPN (Movimiento Popular Neuquiño/Neuquino People's Movement) 2 ; Frepaso (Frente del País Solidario / Front for a Country in Solidarity) 2 ; PRS (Partido Renovador de Salta / Salta Renewal Party) 1, FR (Fuerza Republicana /Republican Force) 1 and ARI 1
Conservative Calgary chose a former federal Liberal candidate as its new mayor as Albertans went to the polls in province wide civic elections.
He served as chairman until his death in 1976.
www.chez.com /vipsinfo/1n42e.htm   (2003 words)

  
 Reports from Argentina, by Dzhon Rid - REVOLUTION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
When I began this series of articles, I just wanted to give a short summary of all the candidates in the upcoming election.
But I soon realized that the situation within the most powerful party, the Peronist Partido Justicialista, wouldn't make any sense at all without an overview of the last sixty years of Argentinian history.
That right there should be ample proof of the crisis of Argentina's "democracy," that is, Argentina's capitalist bourgeois democracy.
www.onesolutionrevolution.de /dzhonrid/20030204b.htm   (1220 words)

  
 Multi-Party Politics - WordReference Forums
In Mexico we also have a list, like the yellow pages someboy edited for his/her country, but the ones that really have options and "lead" and govern are three:
PARTIDO REVOLUCIONARIO INSTITUCIONAL, P ACCION NACIONAL Y P REVOLUCION DEMOCRATICA.
It will probably be a cold day when another party has the chance to enter the race.
forum.wordreference.com /showthread.php?t=28276   (1387 words)

  
 Indembarg - Argentina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Since the return to civilian government in 1983, Argentina has had four democratically elected Presidents: Raul Alfonsin, Carlos Menem, Fernando De La Rua, and on 25 May 2003, Nestor Kirchner.
Following recent elections during the second half of 2003, the Partido Justicialista (PJ) currently enjoys majorities in both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies as well as a large majority of governors.
PJ - Partido Justicialista (known as Peronists): 40/116
www.indembarg.org.ar /secciones/eng/arg_eng.htm   (533 words)

  
 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF PRIVATIZATION: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF BANK PRIVATIZATION IN ARGENTINA by George R.G. Clarke ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The results strongly support the hypothesis that political incentives affect the likelihood of privatization.
We find that that provinces with governors who belonged to the fiscally conservative Partido Justicialista were more likely to privatize; that fiscal and economic crises increased the likelihood of privatization; and that poorly performing banks were more likely to be privatized.
The hypotheses were tested for a specific industry in a specific country making it possible to control for enterprise performance and institutional characteristics.
gunther.smeal.psu.edu /17714.html   (299 words)

  
 Argentine political flags
Partido Socialista Auténtico (P.S.A.) - Authentic Socialist Party
Partido Nuevo Triunfo (P.N.T.) - New Triumph Party
Madres de Plaza de Mayo - May Square Mothers’ flag
www.fotw.us /flags/ar}.html   (187 words)

  
 Argentine provinces since 1983
FR (Misiones)= Frente Renovador (Renewal Front, Misiones); FR (Tucumán)= Fuerza Republicana (Republican Force, Tucumán, authoritarian); MPF = Movemiento Popular de Tierra de Fuego (Tierra del Fuego Popular Movement); MPN = Movimiento Popular Neuquiño (Neuquino People's Movement, regionalist, centrist); PACh = Partido Acción Chaco (Chaco Action Party);
PAL = Pacto Autonomista Liberal (Autonomist Liberal Pact); PB = Partido Bloc (Bloc Party);
PJ = Partido Justicialista (Justicalist Party, conservative, personalist: ex-PP); PN = Partido Nuevo (New Party); PR = Partido Renovador (Renewal Party); UCR = Unión Civica Radical (Radical Civic Union, centrist)
www.worldstatesmen.org /Argentinaprov.html   (1797 words)

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