1936 Peruvian general election explained

Country:Peru
Flag Year:state
Previous Election:1931 Peruvian general election
Previous Year:1931
Election Date:11 October 1936
Next Election:1939 Peruvian general election
Next Year:1939
Module:
Embed:yes
Election Name:Presidential election
Type:presidential
Image1:Dr. Luis Antonio Eguiguren.jpg
Nominee1:Luis A. Eguiguren
Popular Vote1:74,485
Percentage1:37.13%
Color1:ff0000
Popular Vote2:50,162
Percentage2:25.00%
Color2:dbba6d
Image4:Luis A Flores.jpg
Nominee4:Luis A. Flores
Party4:Revolutionary Union
Popular Vote4:46,803
Percentage4:23.33%
Image5:Manuel Vicente Villaran1.jpg
Party5:Independent politician
Popular Vote5:29,166
Percentage5:14.54%
President
Before Election:Óscar R. Benavides
Before Party:Military junta
After Election:Election results annulled

General elections were held in Peru on 11 October 1936.[1] In the presidential election, Luis A. Eguiguren of the appeared to be heading for victory, but outgoing president Óscar R. Benavides ordered the count to be stopped and the election results were subsequently annulled.

Background

Incumbent president Benavides' term of office was due to expire in December 1936. He announced that he would not run for re-election and called elections for 11 October.[1] There were eighteen political parties in existence, but most ran as alliances in the election.[1] Four candidates were approved to run for office, with the election commission barring Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre of the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA) under article 53 of the constitution, which banned 'international parties'.[1] The APRA subsequently convinced Luis Antonio Eguiguren to disown the National Front of and organise his own Democratic Front, which the APRA called for its members to vote for.[1]

Results

President

When it appeared Eguiguren was winning, Benavides ordered the count to be suspended on the basis that members of the banned APRA had voted for him.[1] At the point it was stopped on 21 October, with 70 of the 119 provinces having completed the count, Eguiguren had 74,485 votes,[2] or 37% of the total.

Aftermath

Under pressure from Benavides,[1] on 4 November the outgoing Congress met and declared the election annulled. A motion by the Revolutionary Union that accused Benavides of having "presented the presidential and parliamentary elections of the period 1936–1941" was defeated by 64 votes to 13.[2] Benavides subsequently forced Congress to pass a law extending his term until 1939 and then dissolved the legislature, instead ruling by decree and forming a new all-military government.[1]

Notes and References

  1. https://library.ucsd.edu/research-and-collections/collections/notable-collections/latin-american-elections-statistics/Peru/elections-and-events-1930-1949.html Elections and Events 1930-1949
  2. https://culturadigital.udp.cl/cms/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/LN_1936_11_06.pdf La anulacion de las elecciones generales del 11 de octubre en el Peru por el Jurado Nacional