- and
Alberto Fernández.
Justicialists have been the
largest party in
Congress almost consistently since 1987. The
Justicialist Party was
founded in 1946...
-
Justicialist Party nomination from the odds-on candidate,
Buenos Aires Province Governor Antonio Cafiero, a
policy maker close to the
Justicialists'...
-
leapt by a
third in just four years). In this
policy irony lay the
Justicialists'
greatest weakness ahead of the 1995 election. The
election itself created...
- the UCR). The
Justicialists wrested governorships from the UCR (Córdoba), from the MPF in
Tierra del
Fuego (which
endorsed the
Justicialists), and from the...
- that
dragged on for two
months after the UCR
nominated Alfonsín, the
Justicialists' left wing (the
target of much of the
repression before and
after the...
-
Lower House of
Congress and
would control 130 of the 254 seats. The
Justicialists lost
eight seats (leaving 103) and smaller,
provincial parties made...
- the
Justicialists. 3
seats for
Justicialist Party and 2
seats for
Commitment to Change. 2
seats for
Justicialist Party. 1 seat for
Justicialist Party...
-
strongest party has been the
Justicialist Party,
emerging around the
leadership of Juan Perón (when not banned,
justicialists lost only four presidential...
-
newspaper interviews, not
formally to the church. In the 2001 elections, the
Justicialist Party won a
majority in
Congress and
appointed Ramón
Puerta as Senate...
-
general election as the
Labour candidate. The
Labour Party (later
renamed Justicialist Party), the most
powerful and
influential party in
Argentine history...