1985 Argentine legislative election

1985 Argentine legislative election

3 November 1985

127 of the 254 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Turnout83.77%
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Radical Civic Union

43.58 65 +1
Justicialist Liberation Front

24.49 37 −19
Dissident Peronists

10.52 11 New
Intransigent Party

6.07 5 +3
Union of the Democratic Centre

3.72 2 +1
Democratic Progressive Party

1.24 1 +1
AutonomistLiberalFederalPDP

1.13 2 +1
Democratic Party of Mendoza

0.62 1 +1
Salta Renewal Party

0.46 1 +1
Jujuy People's Movement

0.25 1 +1
Neuquén People's Movement

0.22 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by province

Legislative elections were held in Argentina on 3 November 1985. Voters chose their legislators, with a turnout of 84%.

Background

Raúl Alfonsín's 1983 inauguration had ushered in a new beginning for Argentina in significant ways, chief among them a new relationship between the Argentine military and government. Economic policy continued to dominate political dynamics, however, a concern exacerbated by the economic crisis inherited from the previous regime. The nation's leading labor union, the CGT, was close to the opposition Justicialist Party, and the tension between the CGT and Alfonsín so evident during 1984 (despite the President's populist early policies) turned to hostility after he replaced the pragmatic Minister of the Economy Bernardo Grinspun with the more conservative Juan Sourrouille in February 1985.[1] Sorrouille curtailed his predecessor's wage indexation policy (amid 25% monthly inflation), leading to a sudden decline in real wages. Social discontent was compounded by military objections to sharp budget cutbacks, and bomb threats became frequent.[2]

Fulfilling a 1983 campaign promise, Alfonsín reacted to military unwillingness to court-martial those guilty of Dirty War abuses (in which up to 30,000 mostly non-violent dissidents perished) by advancing a Trial of the Juntas, whose first hearings were held in April. This bold move was complemented by Sourrouille's June enactment of the Austral Plan, whose centerpiece, the Argentine austral would replace the worthless peso argentino at 1,000 to one. Inflation, which had reached 30% a month in June (1,130% for the year), fell to 2% by August and, though a wage freeze prevented real incomes from rising, these new inflation rates (the lowest since 1974) led to quick recovery from a sharp recession early in the year. Alfonsín enjoyed a 70% job approval rating by the time voters headed to the polls in early November, though he owed none of it to his economic policies, which were supported by only 30% of the public.[3] The strong showing for Alfonsín's centrist UCR resulted, instead, from the Dirty War trial, a risky and daring initiative which had gathered international attention and was, by then, in its closing phase.[2]

Results

PartyVotes%Seats
WonTotal
Radical Civic Union6,678,64743.5865130
Justicialist Liberation Front3,753,19424.493792
Dissident Peronists1,611,44110.521111
Intransigent Party930,9406.0756
Union of the Democratic Centre570,4903.7223
People's Front353,1652.3000
Federal Party243,4911.5900
Socialist Unity228,2851.4900
Democratic Progressive Party190,3291.2411
AutonomistLiberalFederalDemocratic Progressive172,4701.1323
Democratic Party of Mendoza94,9880.6211
Salta Renewal Party71,1340.4611
Christian Democratic Party65,8780.4301
Blockist Party of San Juan50,9850.3301
Workers' Party46,8170.3100
Jujuy People's Movement38,1300.2512
Humanist Party36,0020.2300
Integration and Development Movement35,1680.2300
Neuquén People's Movement33,5200.2212
Chubut Action Party20,5370.1300
Independent Democratic Alliance17,2370.1100
Three Flags Party–Christian Democratic Party11,6530.0800
Pampa Federalist Movement11,3940.0700
Popular Line Movement10,2310.0700
Center Party7,5950.0500
Popular Left Front5,7170.0400
Provincial Union5,4610.0400
Autonomy and Sovereignty Party4,0620.0300
Chaco Federalist Alliance3,6820.0200
Fuegian People's Movement3,5820.0200
Liberal Democratic Party3,2480.0200
Democratic Party of Jujuy2,8420.0200
Popular Action Movement2,1330.0100
Patriotic Front2,0530.0100
Frente Popular Federalista1,5730.0100
Labor and People's Party1,4300.0100
Autonomist Federal Pact1,3820.0100
Authentic Socialist Party1,3360.0100
Middle Generation Party1,3100.0100
Nationalist Movement7800.0100
National Popular Front1980.0000
Total15,324,510100.00127254
Valid votes15,324,51098.07
Invalid votes96,3530.62
Blank votes205,4061.31
Total votes15,626,269100.00
Registered voters/turnout18,653,48783.77
Source: Ministry of the Interior,[4] DINE[5]

Results by province

Province UCR FREJULI Dissident Peronists PI Others
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Buenos Aires 2,381,787 41.46 16 563,269 9.80 3 1,549,724 26.98 11 574,285 10.00 4 675,758 11.76 1
Buenos Aires City 848,123 42.90 7 498,320 25.21 4 20,075 1.02 0 155,720 7.88 1 454,633 23.00 1
Catamarca 57,807 50.77 2 49,831 43.77 1 2,156 1.89 0 1,267 1.11 0 2,790 2.45 0
Chaco 168,169 47.66 2 156,245 44.28 2 3,315 0.94 0 25,092 7.11 0
Chubut 53,501 43.34 1 43,587 35.31 1 1,987 1.61 0 24,367 19.74 0
Córdoba 743,958 52.37 5 506,235 35.64 4 54,551 3.84 0 115,804 8.15 0
Corrientes 87,791 25.07 1 68,047 19.43 0 10,684 3.05 0 183,642 52.44 2
Entre Ríos 243,820 46.61 3 207,878 39.74 2 24,184 4.62 0 47,182 9.02 0
Formosa 58,965 44.85 1 59,101 44.96 1 497 0.38 0 12,900 9.81 0
Jujuy 61,403 34.03 1 42,610 23.61 1 28,802 15.96 0 1,080 0.60 0 46,544 25.79 1
La Pampa 58,080 44.42 2 52,253 39.97 1 2,070 1.58 0 18,337 14.03 0
La Rioja 38,106 42.05 1 46,839 51.69 1 1,335 1.47 0 4,342 4.79 0
Mendoza 342,875 53.22 3 166,844 25.90 1 6,901 1.07 0 127,634 19.81 1
Misiones 144,209 54.63 2 102,632 38.88 1 3,037 1.15 0 14,090 5.34 0
Neuquén 48,294 39.92 1 28,595 23.63 1 2,472 2.04 0 41,627 34.41 1
Río Negro 85,097 53.11 1 45,042 28.11 1 11,946 7.46 0 18,154 11.33 0
Salta 109,799 35.02 1 108,060 34.47 1 1,514 0.48 0 94,138 30.03 1
San Juan 115,136 45.44 2 68,673 27.10 1 6,992 2.76 0 62,580 24.70 0
San Luis 61,028 47.99 2 57,735 45.40 1 1,942 1.53 0 6,476 5.09 0
Santa Cruz 23,967 47.97 2 19,713 39.46 1 1,212 2.43 0 5,070 10.15 0
Santa Fe 577,144 39.64 4 506,946 34.82 4 65,949 4.53 0 305,882 21.01 1
Santiago del Estero 132,389 49.16 2 124,073 46.07 1 3,519 1.31 0 9,321 3.46 0
Tierra del Fuego 4,674 30.17 1 5,416 34.96 1 793 5.12 0 4,611 29.76 0
Tucumán 232,525 45.46 2 225,250 44.04 2 4,372 0.85 0 49,314 9.64 0
Total 6,678,647 43.58 65 3,753,194 24.49 37 1,611,441 10.52 11 930,940 6.07 5 2,350,288 15.34 9

References

  1. ^ Todo Argentina: 1984 (in Spanish)
  2. ^ a b Todo Argentina: 1985 (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Noticias. 12 September 1991.
  4. ^ "Elecciones Nacionales ESCRUTINIO DEFINITIVO 1985" (PDF). Ministry of the Interior. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Recorriendo las Elecciones de 1983 a 2013". Dirección Nacional Electoral. Archived from the original on 17 August 2022.