Argentina Election : Shock as Macri Forces Scioli into Second Round
Mauricio Macri : Gave sudden shock to pole pandits |
If there were any remaining doubts that progressive governments in Latin
America are on the defensive, they were shattered last night with the
poor result of the ruling Peronist camp in the Argentinian presidential
elections. Daniel Scioli, the centre-left candidate endorsed by
incumbent Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, was forced into a second-round
runoff by his more market-orientated challenger Mauricio Macri from the
Cambiemos (“Let’s Change”) bloc. For the first time in recent memory,
the Front for Victory also lost control of the governorship of Buenos
Aires province, which is home to one in four voters.
It was the worst night for the ruling camp since the Kirchners came to
power in 2003 (Fernández succeeded her husband Néstor Kirchner in 2007;
he died three years later). The gleeful headlines in the Argentinian
newspapers, most of which are anti-Kirchner, said it all: “Surprises,”
exclaimed ClarÃn. “Macri triumphant,” proclaimed Perfil. “Commotion in
Kirchnerismo,” screamed the tabloid Muy. “Electoral disaster for
Kirchnerismo,” noted La Prensa.
Daniel Scioli : Couldn't do as expected |
When the preliminary results were announced the previous midnight,
swaths of the Argentinian chattering classes were stunned into silence.
In the press room at the Scioli bunker, journalists exclaimed in
disbelief at the numbers flashing up on the screen. Macri was initially
ahead, and although his lead slipped as the count came in, he ended less
than 2.5 points behind a favourite who had been forecast to win
comfortably. Polls had suggested that Scioli was within striking
distance of the 10-point lead needed for an outright first-round win.
Only hours earlier, TV exit surveys had predicted he would be ahead by a
“wide margin”. They were laughably wrong.
Instead, he carries a far slimmer than expected majority into the second
round and knows that he has a fight on his hands in key battlegrounds.
Chief among them is Buenos Aires – a formerly Peronist stronghold that
Scioli had run as governor. In arguably the greatest shock of the night,
the race for his replacement was won by Macri’s opposition camp. The
victor, MarÃa Eugenia Vidal, was ecstatic: “Today, we made the
impossible possible. We are making history,” she said. This was largely
due to a misjudgment by outgoing president Fernández, who had imposed
her unpopular cabinet chief AnÃbal Fernández, no relation, as the ruling
bloc candidate. As a result, the Peronists lost the most populous state
in Argentina. They were also hammered in Córdoba, where Macri won
almost half of the vote
Ahead of the second round on 22 November, the momentum is now clearly
with Macri, the son of Italian migrants, who went on to make a fortune
in the construction industry and become the most successful president of
Boca Juniors football club. “What has happened on this day changes the
politics of this country,” he told cheering supporters, promising to
work “morning, noon and night to earn [voters’] trust and demonstrate
they made the right decision”.
Sergio Massa : Third place runner |
The ruling camp, meanwhile, has to rethink its strategy. With the
second-round campaign already under way, Scioli urged Peronists to
demonstrate their traditional qualities of loyalty and indicated that he
will try to reach out to unaffiliated voters. “United together, we will
triumph,” Scioli declared in a rallying speech. “I call upon the
undecided and independent voters to join this cause.” His aides,
however, were clearly dismayed at the poor showing and said they would
have to analyse and correct the weak points in their approach. The
third-placed candidate, Sergio Massa, a dissident Peronist who won 21%
of the vote, could now play the role of kingmaker. Having proclaimed
himself in favour of change, it is thought that he is leaning towards
the opposition, but he has said he will retreat for several days, draw
up a list of priorities and then enter into negotiations regarding which
side to support.
Fernández, who maintains a high level of support despite a tumultous
period in office, will also be a key figure thanks to her strong backing
from the unions and social movements. Her son Máximo was elected as a
representative for the first time and her sister-in-law and close
confidante Alicia won the governorship of Santa Cruz province in
Patagonia.
She and Scioli will have to address the mistakes they made in the past
few weeks and months, but they might also feel they are running up
against an adverse historical tide. The regional situation has changed
dramatically since the Kirchners entered the Casa Rosada presidential
palace in 2003. That was around the peak of the so-called “pink wave” of
populist leftwing leaders who took power in Latin America, including
Hugo Chávez in Venezuela in 1998, LuÃz Inácio Lula da Silva in Brazil in
2002, Evo Morales in Bolivia in 2005 and Rafael Correa in Ecuador in
2006. For most of the past 10 years, they benefited from strong
economies thanks to rising commodity prices and strong demand from
China, which funded welfare expansions, job creation and poverty
reduction policies. But a downturn and growing allegations of corruption
and mismanagement have eroded support.
Most leftist administrations are still holding on, but only just.
Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, who has struggled with street
protests and the world’s highest inflation since the death of Chávez,
faces tough parliamentary elections in December. Dilma Rousseff, who
replaced Lula, is battling impeachment, scandal and recession. Ecuador
has been racked with protests this summer and has slashed growth
forecasts. Only Morales appears relatively unscathed. In Argentina, the
right are buoyant after last night’s upset. But the left are not out
yet. The second-round campaign will be one of the greatest tests yet of
the stamina of the progressive movement in Latin America.
President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner |
Argentina Election : Shock as Macri Forces Scioli into Second Round
Reviewed by Rahul Hazra
on
12:15 PM
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