1920 Argentine legislative election explained

Country:Argentina
Previous Election:1918
Next Election:1922
Election Date:7 March 1920
Election Name:1920 Argentine legislative election
Seats For Election:101 of 158 seats in the National Congress
Ongoing:no
Noleader:yes
Turnout:53.74%
Party1:Radical Civic Union
Colour1:
  1. E10019
Percentage1:47.20%
Seats1:62
Last Election1:36
Party2:Conservative Parties
Colour2:
  1. 30D5C8
Percentage2:17.85%
Seats2:15
Last Election2:18
Party3:Democratic Progressive Party
Colour3:
  1. 005C9E
Percentage3:16.21%
Seats3:14
Last Election3:1
Party4:Socialist Party
Colour4:
  1. FF9900
Percentage4:11.69%
Seats4:7
Last Election4:3
Party5:Dissident Radical Civic Union
Colour5:
  1. a52a2a
Percentage5:4.50%
Seats5:3
Last Election5:4
Map:Elecciones legislativas de Argentina de 1920 - Resultados por distrito.svg
Map Upright:2

The Argentine legislative elections of 1920 were held on 7 March. Voters chose their legislators and numerous governors, and with a turnout of 53.7%.

Background

A strong economy and a vigorous social policy helped make 1920 a banner year for President Hipólito Yrigoyen, whose UCR won 61 of the 102 seats at stake in the Lower House of Congress.[1]

The party emerged victorious in the City of Buenos Aires, Entre Ríos, La Rioja, Santiago del Estero, and even in districts which had hitherto been dominated by either opposition parties (such as Buenos Aires Province and Tucumán), or dissident factions of the UCR (as in the case of Santa Fe).[1] The party effectively displaced both the Socialist and Democratic Progressive parties in the highly competitive Buenos Aires district by supporting labor rights and advancing programs such as the National Inexpensive Housing Commission (CNCB), which added thousands of units to the capital's perennially strained housing supply.[2] The addition of 38 seats to the Chamber of Deputies, partly as a result of the 1914 Census, further enhanced the UCR's sweep, and for the first time, gave them an absolute majority in the Lower House.

Socialists made modest gains in Congress, and won control of local governments in Zárate and Mar del Plata (the first in Argentina). The Democratic Progressive Party, organized by reformist Congressman Lisandro de la Torre from his Southern League in 1914, continued to make gains, and triumphed in Córdoba Province (though not in Santa Fe, de la Torre's home province). They displaced their former allies, the Conservatives (a holdover from the landowner-controlled National Autonomist Party, which was in power from 1874 to 1916), as the largest party in the minority. Conservatives continued to dominate the Senate, however, and much of Yrigoyen's legislation - notably the establishment of a national merchant marine - continued to encounter long delays. Nor had Yrigoyen been persuasive among the nation's governors, and at the time of the March 1920 elections, fully 14 had been replaced by presidentially-decreed federal intervention.

The removal of Governors by presidential decree had, by itself, helped discourage the establishment of dissident UCR factions, of which there were no fewer than five prior to the election; these elections left only Mendoza Province with a dissident UCR majority delegation. The most prominent such faction, that was led by Santa Fe Governor Rodolfo Lehmann and 8 Congressmen at its height, was weakened by his resignation at the end of 1919, and presented no candidates in 1920. The reformist governor's struggle with the La Forestal logging company, whose striking workers were brutally repressed by both company heavies and national troops, was more to blame for his departure than were differences with President Yrigoyen, and illustrated the limits of the era of pluralist government that began in 1916.[3] [4]

Results

PartyVotes%Seats wonTotal seats
Radical Civic Union (UCR)338,88147.206295
bgcolor=#30D5C8 rowspan=8Total Conservative Parties128,17017.851532
Conservative Party71,4739.9610
Liberal Party of Corrientes16,4532.292
Liberal Party of Tucumán12,7691.78
Provincial Union8,0921.131
Civic Concentration7,7121.072
Democratic Union6,1200.85
Autonomist Party of Mendoza5,5510.77
Democratic Progressive Party (PDP)116,38316.211414
Socialist Party (PS)83,95911.69710
bgcolor=#a52a2a rowspan=6Total Dissident Radical Civic Union32,3344.5037
Intransigent Radical Civic Union9,4501.32
Black Radical Civic Union8,6711.211
Lencinist Radical Civic Union7,3191.021
Officialist Radical Civic Union4,1090.571
Independent Radical Civic Union2,7850.39
Argentine Socialist Party8,7261.22
International Socialist Party4,4270.62
Popular Union2,1810.30
bgcolor=fuchsiaFeminist Party1,2580.18
bgcolor=lightblueUnitarian Party6720.09
Agrarian League3810.05
Others5850.08
Total717,957100101158
align=left colspan=2Positive votes717,95793.01
align=left colspan=2Blank votes19,8452.57
align=left colspan=2Invalid votes110.00
align=left colspan=2Tally sheet differences34,1004.42
align=left colspan=2Total votes771,913100
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout1,436,47253.74
Source:[5]

Notes and References

  1. Nómina de diputados de la nacion por distrito electoral: periodo 1854-1991. Buenos Aires: Cámara de Diputados de la Nación, Secretaría Parlamentaria, Dirección de Archivo, Publicaciones y Museo, Subdirección de Publicaciones e Investigaciones Históricas, 1991.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20080914133218/http://www.todo-argentina.net/historia/radicales/Yrigoyen1/1920.html Todo Argentina: 1920
  3. Gianello, Leoncio. Historia de Santa Fe. Buenos Aires: Editorial Plus Ultra, 1978.
  4. Rock, David. Argentina: 1516-1982. University of California Press, 1987.
  5. Book: Memoria del Ministerio del Interior presentada al Honorable Congreso de la Nación 1919-1920 . 1920 . Estudio Gráfico de A, de Martino . Buenos Aires . Tomo I . 22-65.