Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
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Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Argentina’s opposition candidate Macri wins presidential run-off vote, as Scioli concedes defeat
Published time: 22 Nov, 2015 23:13 Edited time: 23 Nov, 2015 01:33
Mauricio Macri, presidential candidate for the Cambiemos (Let's Change) alliance, casts his vote at a polling station in Buenos Aires, November 22, 2015. © Marcos Brindicci / Reuters
Conservative opposition candidate Mauricio Macri is winning the presidential run-off election with over 53 percent of the vote, while Daniel Scioli, the candidate backed by outgoing president Cristina Fernandez, is behind with 46 percent.
Scioli conceded defeat as he called Macri to offer his congratulations on the victory. “The Argentine people ... have elected a new president, Mauricio Macri, who I have just congratulated by telephone,” Scioli said to his supporters.
The updated results were released by the National Electoral Chamber of Argentina. Exit polls conducted by local TV stations also suggested that Macri will win the election.
With 66 percent of polling station returns counted, Macri had 53.46 percent of votes, with Scioli at 46.54 percent, according to Argentina’s official election body.
A source from the electoral body said that current presidential election results forecasting a Macri victory are irreversible, Reuters reported.
The polls closed at 6 pm local time in Argentina. Official results are expected later on Sunday.
Macri’s campaign headquarters are projecting him to win by a margin of 5 to 8 percentage points.
“This feels like a dream,” doctor Angela Torres told Reuters from Macri headquarters. “A new Argentina is on its way that will be better in every sense.”
Meanwhile, Scioli’s campaign team is waiting for more definitive official results and said that it will be issuing a statement later.
“If the results stay like this it’s a real setback for the country,” Scioli supporter, Maria Rosa Soria, told Reuters.
https://www.rt.com/news/323052-argentina-run-off-election/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
Published time: 22 Nov, 2015 23:13 Edited time: 23 Nov, 2015 01:33
Mauricio Macri, presidential candidate for the Cambiemos (Let's Change) alliance, casts his vote at a polling station in Buenos Aires, November 22, 2015. © Marcos Brindicci / Reuters
Conservative opposition candidate Mauricio Macri is winning the presidential run-off election with over 53 percent of the vote, while Daniel Scioli, the candidate backed by outgoing president Cristina Fernandez, is behind with 46 percent.
Scioli conceded defeat as he called Macri to offer his congratulations on the victory. “The Argentine people ... have elected a new president, Mauricio Macri, who I have just congratulated by telephone,” Scioli said to his supporters.
The updated results were released by the National Electoral Chamber of Argentina. Exit polls conducted by local TV stations also suggested that Macri will win the election.
With 66 percent of polling station returns counted, Macri had 53.46 percent of votes, with Scioli at 46.54 percent, according to Argentina’s official election body.
A source from the electoral body said that current presidential election results forecasting a Macri victory are irreversible, Reuters reported.
The polls closed at 6 pm local time in Argentina. Official results are expected later on Sunday.
Macri’s campaign headquarters are projecting him to win by a margin of 5 to 8 percentage points.
“This feels like a dream,” doctor Angela Torres told Reuters from Macri headquarters. “A new Argentina is on its way that will be better in every sense.”
Meanwhile, Scioli’s campaign team is waiting for more definitive official results and said that it will be issuing a statement later.
“If the results stay like this it’s a real setback for the country,” Scioli supporter, Maria Rosa Soria, told Reuters.
https://www.rt.com/news/323052-argentina-run-off-election/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
anti zapadni pro ruski socijalisti izgubili vlast?
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Hoće li klerofašisti konačno odahnuti?
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
kakva su ekonomska stajališta toga konzervativca? jeli on za neoliberalni kapitalizam ili za socijalizam kao prethodna vlast?
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Macri topples Argentina's Peronists, tough reforms ahead
Conservative challenger Mauricio Macri turned Argentine politics on its head on Sunday, kicking the ruling Peronist movement out of power with a promise to liberalize the ailing economy and end a culture of divisive politics.
Macri, the son of an Italian-born construction magnate, won the election by tapping into frustration over anemic growth, high inflation and corruption, and will become only the third non-Peronist leader since the end of military rule in 1983.
The other two failed to finish their terms, however, a reminder of the difficulties that Peronist labor unions, state governors and opponents in Congress could cause Macri if he is unable to get the economy growing quickly.
After an unpredictable campaign that pitted poorer Argentines grateful for generous welfare programs against others exasperated with state shackles on the economy, Macri will need to deliver on pro-business reforms without hurting the poor.
"We've been saying from Tierra del Fuego in the south to Jujuy in the north that we have to build an Argentina with zero poverty, and that's what we're going to do together," Macri told his jubilant supporters on Sunday night.
Argentine sovereign debt rose on Monday on news of his election, with the 2033 dollar discount bond hitting its highest level since April 2007 US040114GL81=R. While Argentina's stock market was not yet open for business, the Frankfurt-listed American Depository Receipt of Argentina's Grupo Financiero Galicia (GGALyb.F) jumped 6.28 percent.
Macri defeated leftist ruling party candidate Daniel Scioli as voters punished outgoing President Cristina Fernandez for her handling of the economy and her abrasive style of leadership.
The 56 year old faces a number of economic challenges. Slow growth is driven by unsustainable spending, inflation is at well above 20 percent and capital controls have backfired to leave foreign reserves at nine-year lows.
The country is also mired in a messy debt default that is blocking access to global credit markets.
Macri, who served two terms as mayor of Buenos Aires, has promised to dismantle a web of currency controls and trade restrictions that have deterred investors and hobbled growth.
Policy changes such as eliminating hefty taxes on grains exports and revamping economic data long viewed as manipulated by Fernandez's government will be quick hits to underscore his intent to bring change.
But elsewhere he will have to move carefully.
Removing capital controls that have curbed access to dollars and unifying a multi-tiered exchange rate may lead to a sharp devaluation which, while needed to restore trade competitiveness, will likely feed into consumer prices.
In the final stages of campaigning, Macri indicated he favored a more staggered lifting of currency curbs.
"We cannot solve all the problems that this government is leaving behind on the first day," Macri said ahead of the run-off vote on Sunday.
He is expected to scale back energy and transport subsidies in his first year in order to narrow a yawning fiscal deficit.
Economists estimate about 20 percent of government spending is on subsidies, but weaning Argentines off cheap power and transport may prove unpopular.
HARD TRANSITION AHEAD
"The transition from failed country to global power is likely to be both bumpy and slow," said Roberto Lampl, Head of Latin American Investments at Alquity Investment Management. "Macri will have to undo twelve years of damage but looks set to prioritize the economy and growth."
"Today there is an optimism in Buenos Aires which hasn’t been seen for over a decade, change has finally come to Argentina."
Scioli, a moderate Peronist, had the support of Fernandez loyalists but he failed to convince others he would restore investor confidence at a time when Argentina seeks to exploit vast shale oil and gas reserves.
Even so, his warnings that Macri's pro-market policies will put the interests of big business ahead of workers, erode salaries and destroy pensions have laid down possible battle lines between Macri and his opponents over the next four years.
"If Macri devalues then people could go out into the streets and protest," said Scioli voter Ana Marchessi, a 56-year-old lawyer.
Macri's margin of victory was less than 3 percentage points and his challenge will be to show an economic recovery is taking root by late 2016 or he could face a hammering in a mid-term Congressional elections the following year.
The past two non-Peronist leaders since democracy was restored in 1983 failed to complete their terms.
Both were from the Radical Party. Raul Alfonsin stepped down six months early in 1989 as hyper-inflation raged, and Fernando de la Rua fled the presidential palace in a helicopter during the 2001-02 depression.
Lacking a majority in Congress, Macri is likely to move quickly with his reform agenda during an expected early honeymoon period and try to draw on cross-party support.
He is expected to court the backing of lawmakers loyal to centrist Sergio Massa, who placed third in the first round of the presidential election last month, and other smaller parties to outmaneuver Fernandez hardliners.
Control over discretionary transfers that boost provincial budgets, meanwhile, will give Macri leverage over governors and in turn their senators in the upper house.
His "Let's Change" alliance will control Argentina's three main bases of power: the federal government, the populous Buenos Aires province that traditionally was a Peronist stronghold, and the capital city.
"This is a huge shift for Argentine politics," said Juan Cruz Diaz, head of the Cefeidas Group.
"For years the opposition, controlled by an unsuccessful Radical Party, claimed it was impossible to govern with Peronism in opposition. Macri has a big opportunity to prove that wrong".
Conservative challenger Mauricio Macri turned Argentine politics on its head on Sunday, kicking the ruling Peronist movement out of power with a promise to liberalize the ailing economy and end a culture of divisive politics.
Macri, the son of an Italian-born construction magnate, won the election by tapping into frustration over anemic growth, high inflation and corruption, and will become only the third non-Peronist leader since the end of military rule in 1983.
The other two failed to finish their terms, however, a reminder of the difficulties that Peronist labor unions, state governors and opponents in Congress could cause Macri if he is unable to get the economy growing quickly.
After an unpredictable campaign that pitted poorer Argentines grateful for generous welfare programs against others exasperated with state shackles on the economy, Macri will need to deliver on pro-business reforms without hurting the poor.
"We've been saying from Tierra del Fuego in the south to Jujuy in the north that we have to build an Argentina with zero poverty, and that's what we're going to do together," Macri told his jubilant supporters on Sunday night.
Argentine sovereign debt rose on Monday on news of his election, with the 2033 dollar discount bond hitting its highest level since April 2007 US040114GL81=R. While Argentina's stock market was not yet open for business, the Frankfurt-listed American Depository Receipt of Argentina's Grupo Financiero Galicia (GGALyb.F) jumped 6.28 percent.
Macri defeated leftist ruling party candidate Daniel Scioli as voters punished outgoing President Cristina Fernandez for her handling of the economy and her abrasive style of leadership.
The 56 year old faces a number of economic challenges. Slow growth is driven by unsustainable spending, inflation is at well above 20 percent and capital controls have backfired to leave foreign reserves at nine-year lows.
The country is also mired in a messy debt default that is blocking access to global credit markets.
Macri, who served two terms as mayor of Buenos Aires, has promised to dismantle a web of currency controls and trade restrictions that have deterred investors and hobbled growth.
Policy changes such as eliminating hefty taxes on grains exports and revamping economic data long viewed as manipulated by Fernandez's government will be quick hits to underscore his intent to bring change.
But elsewhere he will have to move carefully.
Removing capital controls that have curbed access to dollars and unifying a multi-tiered exchange rate may lead to a sharp devaluation which, while needed to restore trade competitiveness, will likely feed into consumer prices.
In the final stages of campaigning, Macri indicated he favored a more staggered lifting of currency curbs.
"We cannot solve all the problems that this government is leaving behind on the first day," Macri said ahead of the run-off vote on Sunday.
He is expected to scale back energy and transport subsidies in his first year in order to narrow a yawning fiscal deficit.
Economists estimate about 20 percent of government spending is on subsidies, but weaning Argentines off cheap power and transport may prove unpopular.
HARD TRANSITION AHEAD
"The transition from failed country to global power is likely to be both bumpy and slow," said Roberto Lampl, Head of Latin American Investments at Alquity Investment Management. "Macri will have to undo twelve years of damage but looks set to prioritize the economy and growth."
"Today there is an optimism in Buenos Aires which hasn’t been seen for over a decade, change has finally come to Argentina."
Scioli, a moderate Peronist, had the support of Fernandez loyalists but he failed to convince others he would restore investor confidence at a time when Argentina seeks to exploit vast shale oil and gas reserves.
Even so, his warnings that Macri's pro-market policies will put the interests of big business ahead of workers, erode salaries and destroy pensions have laid down possible battle lines between Macri and his opponents over the next four years.
"If Macri devalues then people could go out into the streets and protest," said Scioli voter Ana Marchessi, a 56-year-old lawyer.
Macri's margin of victory was less than 3 percentage points and his challenge will be to show an economic recovery is taking root by late 2016 or he could face a hammering in a mid-term Congressional elections the following year.
The past two non-Peronist leaders since democracy was restored in 1983 failed to complete their terms.
Both were from the Radical Party. Raul Alfonsin stepped down six months early in 1989 as hyper-inflation raged, and Fernando de la Rua fled the presidential palace in a helicopter during the 2001-02 depression.
Lacking a majority in Congress, Macri is likely to move quickly with his reform agenda during an expected early honeymoon period and try to draw on cross-party support.
He is expected to court the backing of lawmakers loyal to centrist Sergio Massa, who placed third in the first round of the presidential election last month, and other smaller parties to outmaneuver Fernandez hardliners.
Control over discretionary transfers that boost provincial budgets, meanwhile, will give Macri leverage over governors and in turn their senators in the upper house.
His "Let's Change" alliance will control Argentina's three main bases of power: the federal government, the populous Buenos Aires province that traditionally was a Peronist stronghold, and the capital city.
"This is a huge shift for Argentine politics," said Juan Cruz Diaz, head of the Cefeidas Group.
"For years the opposition, controlled by an unsuccessful Radical Party, claimed it was impossible to govern with Peronism in opposition. Macri has a big opportunity to prove that wrong".
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
američki neoliberalni agentFénix wrote:
Conservative challenger Mauricio Macri turned Argentine politics on its head on Sunday, kicking the ruling Peronist movement out of power with a promise to liberalize the ailing economy and end a culture of divisive politics.
.
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Ode i Argentina u neoliberalni kapitalizam , ostaje još jedino Venezuela
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Macri has expressed pro-life views regarding the abortion debate. In an interview published by La Nación in 2014, Macri stated: "I am in favor of life; I don't think we need to open that debate".[31] Nevertheless, he clarified that he would abide by any law on the matter sanctioned by Congress, regardless of his personal views.[32]
Macri has promised that, if he were to win the presidential elections, he would distance himself from the populist government of Venezuela and attempt a realignment of Argentina's foreign policy with the aim of improving relations with the Pacific Alliance, which encompasses Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Chile. When asked what he would like to change about Argentina's current foreign policy, he replied "Everything!".[33]
At the second 2015 Presidential Debate, which saw both Daniel Scioli and Mauricio Macri discussing issues ranging from the economy and foreign policy to education and poverty, Macri expressed he is determined, if elected President, to call for Venezuela's suspension from Mercosur as a result of President Maduro's perceived violations of the Democratic Clause of Mercosur.[33] There is precedent for measures like this, as Paraguay was suspended from Mercosur in 2012 following the Impeachment of Fernando Lugo,[34] an event that was also criticized by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.[35]
Regarding Argentina's trade partner Brazil, Macri has said that he will make it a priority to create a "strategic alliance" with Brazil in order to initiate discussions of unification with the Pacific Alliance.[33] When asked about Argentina's possible relations with the United States, Macri stated that he is interested in strengthening ties with Washington and coordinate efforts to eventually engage in a war on drugs in Argentina.[33]
Macri has expressed a will to end currency controls,[36] which have been in place in Argentina since 2011.[37]
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
konzervativac, katolik i za liberalne ekonomske reforme i naklonjen zapadu.. ode Argentina ukurac
Guest- Guest
Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
Hoće li konačno policija čuvati napadnute katolike, a ne napadačke lezbe?EmberSpirit wrote:konzervativac, katolik i za liberalne ekonomske reforme i naklonjen zapadu.. ode Argentina ukurac
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Regoč-
Posts : 35954
2015-08-21
Age : 106
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Re: Kraj Kirchnerizma: Argentina skreće u konzervativno
To ništa ne garantira. Socijalisti su ko fol neki tvrdi, a ispali qrac meki i retardirani. Deklaracija u zadnjih 30 godina nema baš puno veze s upakiranim proizvodom. To će sve vrijeme pokazati. Mjerilo je samo koliko držiš američke NGO-vna na lancima, a kako stvari stoje, baš nitko ih ne drži.Regoč wrote:Hoće li konačno policija čuvati napadnute katolike, a ne napadačke lezbe?EmberSpirit wrote:konzervativac, katolik i za liberalne ekonomske reforme i naklonjen zapadu.. ode Argentina ukurac
Kod nas je tzv. 'konzervativni' i 'desni' HDZ jasno dao do znanja.
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