| Argentine leader suffers poll blow |
| Global | ||||||||
| By Agencies | ||||||||
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The ruling Peronist party lost seats in congress and lost its majority in the 256-seat lower house and the 72-seat senate, official results suggested on Monday. Fernandez's husband, Nestor Kirchner, conceded a closely-watched battle to win a congressional seat in the populous Buenos Aires province. The party also faced defeat in the country's five largest provinces amid the polls, which are widely seen as a referendum on the presidential couple's popularity. The Argentine leader succeeded her husband Nestor Kirchner as president in 2007, but has seen her popularity fall along as the country's economy continues to suffer. With most of the votes counted, Kirchner conceded defeat to his rival Francisco de Narvaez, a dissident Peronist and businessman. "We have lost by one-and-a-half or two points and we have no problem recognising it," he said. 'Weakened majority'
Fernandez had brought forward the date of the election, arguing that this would allow Argentines to unite against the global economic crisis. Doris Capurro of the Ibarometro institute said: "The party in power is losing seats and votes: it obtained 38.7 per cent of votes in the 2005 legislative elections against 25 per cent today. "It keeps a relative majority, albeit weakened." Edgardo Mocca, a political science professor at the University of Buenos Aires, said the government's political and economic course was at stake "because the parliamentary majorities depend on the continuation and advance of some politicians". Mocca said the election could mark a "model shift with respect to the neo-liberal policies that preceded it". Argentina once prided itself on having more in common with Europe than many of its troubled Latin American neighbours, but drug use in slums, widespread poverty and growing insecurity are continue to plague the nation's 40 million people. Economic woes But as world commodity prices collapsed, so did the popularity of the Kirchners. Kirchner is still widely considered to be the main power-broker behind his wife's administration.
Tags: Cristina Fernandez Argentina |
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