1931 Argentine general election

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General elections were held in Argentina 8 November 1931.

Registered2,116,552
Turnout73.80%
Turnout73.81%
Quick facts 376 members of the Electoral College 189 votes needed to win, Registered ...
1931 Argentine general election

Presidential election
← 1928
8 November 1931
1937 â†’

376 members of the Electoral College
189 votes needed to win
Registered2,116,552
Turnout73.80%
 
Nominee Agustín P. Justo Lisandro de la Torre
Party UCRA PDP
Alliance Concordancia Civil Alliance [es]
Running mate
Nicolás Repetto
Electoral vote 237 124
Popular vote 864,394 487,584
Percentage 61.44% 34.66%

Results by province

President before election

José F. Uriburu
ALN

Elected President

Agustín P. Justo
PDN

Chamber of Deputies
← 1930
8 November 1931
1934 â†’

All 158 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
80 seats needed for a majority
Turnout73.81%
Party Vote % Seats
Chamber of Deputies
Concordancia 60.05 95
Civil Alliance [es] 34.25 57
Entre Ríos UCRA [es] 3.28 6
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by province
Close

Background

Concordance candidate Agustín Justo (left) and his benefactor, dictator José Félix Uriburu.

Following months of protest triggered in part by the onset of the Great Depression, a quiet coup d'état deposed the aging Hipólito Yrigoyen in September 1930. His country's first leader elected via secret male universal suffrage, Yrigoyen had strained alliances within his own centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR) through frequent interventions against willful governors and had set business powerhouses such as Standard Oil against him through his support of YPF, the state oil concern founded in 1922.[1] Staging its first coup since 1861, the Argentine military, then dominated by conservative, rural interests, called on José Félix Uriburu, a retired general and member of the Supreme War Council, to assume the role of Provisional President. Uriburu, the nephew of former President José Evaristo Uriburu, had no taste for politics and was in ailing health.[2]

He nevertheless set down an ambitious agenda, entrusting his Interior Minister, Matías Sánchez Sorondo, to replace the 1912 Sáenz Peña Law (which provided for universal male suffrage and the secret ballot) with one promoting a single, ruling party not unlike the one that kept the landowner-oriented National Autonomist Party (PAN) in power from 1874 to 1916. Aligning themselves behind the relatively moderate National Democratic Party, conservatives were defeated in gubernatorial polls in the paramount Province of Buenos Aires in April 1931. The results not only raised hopes for the centrist, urban-oriented UCR, it also persuaded Uriburu that Sánchez Sorondo's "electoral reform" would not keep conservatives in power, in and of itself.

The UCR turned to Marcelo Torcuato de Alvear for leadership ahead of the November 1931 elections. The scion of one of Argentina's traditional landed families and President from 1922 to 1928, Alvear's alliance with Yrigoyen soured as he challenged the latter's personality cult (hence his creation of a splinter, "Antipersonalist" UCR). The seasoned Alvear, however, took care to assuage the still-popular Yrigoyen's objections by naming former Salta Province Governor Adolfo Güemes (a staunch Yrigoyen supporter) as his running mate.[3]

Facing a recovered and nearly-unified UCR, President Uriburu dispensed with his previous pledge to restore constitutional order and annulled the Buenos Aires Province elections. He also promoted the Argentine Civic Legion, an armed fascist organization entrusted to intimidate the opposition.[4] Alvear's establishment of a Renewal Junta helped lead to a violent July 20 clash with Uriburu's forces in Corrientes Province, which gave the President the pretext for ordering Alvear's deportation, a few days later. Deprived of their candidate, the UCR boycotted the 1931 election, though party committees in a number of provinces participated in the November polls.[2]

The support of UCR Senator Leopoldo Melo (the leader of the anti-Yrigoyen faction of the party) and Uriburu for retired General Agustín Justo as candidate resulted in the Concordance. This new, conservative alliance heeded Uriburu's sage advice during their nominating convention, sidestepping imposing landowners in favor of Justo, who had been President Alvear's War Minister in the 1920s. They picked former Córdoba Governor Julio Roca as his running mate; Roca, the son of the late PAN leader, Julio A. Roca, had led the Democratic Party of Córdoba.[2]

A National Democratic Party ballot.

The Democratic Progressive Party (PDP), known for its anti-corruption platform, nominated Senator Lisandro de la Torre, who also earned the endorsement of the Socialist Party of Argentina, a party in search of leadership following the passing of Juan B. Justo, in 1928. The alliance alienated conservatives in the PDP, however, who instead endorsed the aging Francisco A. Barroetaveña, a former Senator who ran on a UCR ticket limited to his Entre Ríos Province. Barroetaveña, who helped found the UCR in 1890, broke with Yrigoyen during the 1920s and hoped to rally the exiled Alvear's supporters behind him.

Ultimately, voter intimidation and widespread irregularities helped give the National Democratic-led Concordance a sizable victory on election night. The electoral college, however, which counted the conservatives' ad hoc Lista Única (Unified List) separately, was far more closely divided: 135 for Justo, 124 for de la Torre, and 117 for the numerous UCR tickets who defied Alvear's boycott (including Barroetaveña's). As most of these splinter UCR tickets were led by conservative figures opposed to the muck-raking Senator de la Torre, their pledge of most of their 117 electors handed Justo the Presidency.[3]

Candidates

Results

President

More information Candidate, Running mate ...
CandidateRunning mateParty or alliancePublic voteElectoral vote
Votes%Votes%
Agustín Pedro JustoJulio Argentino Pascual RocaConcordanciaNational Democratic Party508,27136.1315744.10
Unified List126,3928.9820.56
PDN–Pactist Liberal–UCRA [es]28,8352.05123.37
People's Party [es]9,2460.6661.69
Total672,74447.8219755.34
Lisandro de la TorreNicolás RepettoCivil Alliance [es] (PDP–PS)487,58434.6612434.83
Agustín Pedro JustoJosé Nicolás MatienzoConcordanciaAntipersonalist Radical Civic Union [es]50,8013.6171.97
Independent Socialist Party37,7882.6930.84
Unified Radical Civic Union [es]28,3432.01113.09
Liberal Party of Corrientes27,1391.9361.69
Provincial Defence–White Flag [es]22,1951.5861.69
Blockist Radical Civic Union [es]20,9101.4971.97
UCRA [es]–PSI2,4980.18
Liberal Party of San Juan1,9760.14
Total191,65013.624011.24
Francisco A. BarroetaveñaJosé Nicolás MatienzoIndependent Radical Civic Union41,4742.95154.21
Genaro Giacobini [es]Héctor GonzálezPublic Health Party [es]4,5070.32
No candidateNo candidateNational Agrarian Union4,2230.30
No candidateNo candidateReform Party4,1630.30
No candidateNo candidateDissident Liberal Party of Córdoba5320.04
Total1,406,877100.00356100.00
Valid votes1,406,87790.07
Invalid/blank votes155,1569.93
Total votes1,562,033100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,116,55273.80
Source: Cantón,[5] Minitry of the Interior,[6] Chamber of Deputies[7]
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Chamber of Deputies

More information Party or alliance, Votes ...
Party or allianceVotes%Seats
1932–341932–36Total
ConcordanciaNational Democratic Party479,08734.93273158
Independent Socialist Party96,5447.046511
Santa Fe Radical Civic Union [es]80,8225.89336
Antipersonalist Radical Civic Union [es]46,9053.42505
Unified Radical Civic Union [es]29,9412.18224
Liberal Party of Corrientes28,5222.08235
Provincial Defence–White Flag [es]24,7971.81112
Blockist Radical Civic Union [es]20,3301.48202
People's Party [es]11,4140.83202
UCRA [es]–PSI3,1070.23000
Liberal Party of San Juan2,1930.16000
Total823,66260.05504595
Civic Alliance [es]Socialist Party360,81326.30202242
Democratic Progressive Party99,6037.266713
Civic Alliance [es]9,4020.69112
Total469,81834.25273057
Entre Ríos Antipersonalist Radical Civic Union [es]44,9823.28246
Agrarian Party14,6701.07000
Reform Party9,0980.66000
Public Health Party [es]5,4240.40000
Dissident Democratic Party of San Luis [es]2,1210.15000
Labour Gathering Party1,0510.08000
Republican Gathering8560.06000
Total1,371,682100.007979158
Valid votes1,371,68287.81
Invalid/blank votes190,46012.19
Total votes1,562,142100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,116,55273.81
Source: Cantón,[5] El Orden,[8][9][10] Diario Santa Fe,[11][12][13][14] El Litoral[15][16][17][18][19]
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Results by province

More information Province, Concordance ...
Province Concordance Civic Alliance Others
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Buenos Aires 229,248 64.19 28 123,272 34.52 14 4,602 1.29 0
Buenos Aires City 90,874 33.18 10 171,545 62.63 22 11,494 4.20 0
Catamarca 19,444 100 2 — — — — — —
Córdoba 97,333 80.34 10 19,421 16.03 5 4,400 3.63 0
Corrientes 54,661 93.82 7 3,598 6.18 0 — — —
Entre Ríos 31,303 35.18 3 12,704 14.28 0 44,982 50.55 6
Jujuy 11,414 81.88 2 2,526 18.12 0 — — —
La Rioja 13,535 89.75 2 1,546 10.25 0 — — —
Mendoza 29,064 75.56 4 9,402 24.44 2 — — —
Salta 22,316 85.68 3 3,729 14.32 0 — — —
San Juan 29,489 87.64 3 4,159 12.36 0 — — —
San Luis 12,154 69.84 2 3,128 17.97 1 2,121 12.19 0
Santa Fe 80,822 43.43 6 99,603 53.52 13 5,668 3.05 0
Santiago del Estero 51,823 86.37 6 3,241 5.40 0 4,935 8.23 0
Tucumán 50,182 80.77 7 11,944 19.23 0 — — —
Total 823,662 60.05 95 469,818 34.25 57 78,202 5.70 6
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References

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