Home » News » “Peronism” in Argentina .. Will lead the country to a clash with America?

“Peronism” in Argentina .. Will lead the country to a clash with America?

The left line in Argentina is a historic victory in the country’s presidential election, after left-wing candidate Alberto Fernandez managed to defeat the outgoing president Mauroísio Macri, of the country’s liberal camp, in the elections that took place last Sunday, October 27.

With this, the Socialists returned to the forefront of the scene again in the land of silver, located in the continent of South America, in a region where the United States is hostile to the socialist approach, which it has sought to uphold since the Cold War era with the former Soviet Union.

The United States is hostile to Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba, and Nicaragua in the Americas, and Washington does not hide its desire to remove socialist regimes from these countries, especially in Venezuela, where President Nicholas Maduro, Hugo Chavez’s successor, has ruled the leader who fought a war against what he called imperialism American.

And the Argentine president-elect was Prime Minister during the era of former Argentine President Christina Kirchner, who had very good relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which makes the victory of Alberto Fernandez welcome in Russia, unlike the situation in the United States, even if it was not announced.

Peronism in Argentina

The newly elected president is an extension of the Peronist camp in the country, a group that rejects the new liberal policy and belongs to the leftist camp.

Peronism is a left-wing Argentine ideology linked to the politics of former President Juan Peron, who ruled Argentina for nearly ten years between two presidential periods and laid the foundations for a system of governance that confronted capitalist liberalism.

Juan Peron chaired Argentina between 1946 and 1955, and was overthrown by a military coup in June 1955, which was carried out by the naval fleet led by General Eduardo Leonardi, following a revolution that came out against the deteriorating political and economic conditions in the country.

Peron then fled to Paraguay, and from there to Spain, which made him an optional exile, where he stayed eighteen years until he returned to run for president in 1973, and wins and remains in office for one year, after he passed away in 1974.

Peronists, who follow the approach of Juan Byron, adopt policies that follow a left-wing ideology that rejects neoliberalism, and is considered an alternative to it, which could open the door to a hidden clash with the United States in the coming period, with the departure of Mauricio Macri from power, and the leftist left Alberto Fernandez.

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