Talk:List of heads of state of Argentina

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Rontrigger in topic Perón's last vice president
Former FLCList of heads of state of Argentina is a former featured list candidate. Please view the link under Article milestones below to see why the nomination was archived. Once the objections have been addressed you may resubmit the article for featured list status.
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DateProcessResult
October 26, 2010Peer reviewReviewed
November 9, 2010Featured list candidateNot promoted
Current status: Former featured list candidate

"Acting" is not an adequate link for de facto presidents. I think this formulation should be replaced by "de facto". Andres 15:27, 3 Dec 2003 (UTC)

The correct form seems to be Farrell, not Farrel. I'll make the change. Andres 16:16, 3 Dec 2003 (UTC)

Puerta - Caamaño Presidencies December 2001

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Ramón Puerta and Eduardo Caamaño were never actually Presidents of Argentina. Puerta was the "Presidente Provisional del Senado" (Provisional President of the Senate) at the time of the resignation of President Fernando de la Rúa, and Camaño was "Presidente de la Cámara de Diputados" (President of the Lower House") when Rodríguez Saa resigned.

According to the Argentine law (Ley de Acefalía), in case of death or resignation of the President, the VicePresident is to be charged President. Nonetheless, nor De la Rua nor Rodríguez Saa had Vicepresidents at the time. In that case, (always according to Argentine law), the Provisional President of the Senate, or if he she ressigns/dies, the President of the Lower House, has to Provisional assume the Executive power. But these two do not become "President". They act as "Provisional President of the Senate, in exercise of the Executive Power", and the law orders them to call for general elections as soon as possible.

Therefore, Puerta and Caamaño were never Presidents of the country, and their inclusion in the Argentine Presidents list is mistaken.

The media, at the time, called them "presidents", but that is not correct. It would be like calling Cheney "President" everytime that Bush is outside the US, just because in that moment Cheney exercises the Executive branch in the country.

I would suggest to take out Puerta's and Camaño's names form the Argentine Presidents list, as that is a mistake. Otherwise, you should add a reference for this (or any other) further explanation of the issue.

Martin. 29.1.04

Is it correct to call them 'acting presidents'? Andres 20:21, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)

State leaders by year

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I'm currently working on the State leaders by year project, but there seems to be a period without any formal head of state frome 1820 to 1826. Any ideas how Argentina should be listed for this time period? Fornadan (t) 11:23, 17 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Improving the list

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In the early sections it may make sense to keep separate lists of a few entries, Juntas, triumvirates, unipersonal offices, lack of national heads of state, etc; are completely different things. However, since Mitre there's little need to keep those small lists constantly "interrupted" by pieces of text. From that point, it should be a single table. This may be done with a system similar to the one used at List of Presidents of Venezuela, wich is a featured list (a status this list should aspire to achieve as well). I haven't choose that specific list randomly: besides being featured, Venezuela also has a history of legal presidents and presidents that took office after coups, having to make notice of which is which. It is done with entry colours for each party (and military being a "party" for these purposes), and an additional field to notice the way the president took power. Things like the dates when universal suffrage is installed or the start of historical periods (such as the infamous decade or the return to democracy may be noted on the "notes" section, without need to interrupt the list. MBelgrano (talk) 01:46, 14 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

Numbering

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Cristina Fernández being the 54th president... is there any official numbering? Or is this just Wikipedia's whim? --Againme (talk) 15:00, 14 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

No, there's nothing official about it. Even more, the numbering was removed from Wikipedia in Spanish, see es:Discusión:Presidente de la Nación Argentina (of course, in Spanish) MBelgrano (talk) 16:50, 14 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

International relations

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There's a little misunderstanding, both here and in some other articles. It is said that Rosas was given the power manage the international relations of Argentina, other times it is said (or implied) that he did so out of hegemony over the other provinces. Either thing is mistaken. This arrangement did not start with Rosas, it started with the fall of Rivadavia. With the lack of national authorities of any kind, the provinces granted a few things to the Governor of Buenos Aires Province (more to the office itself than to whoever is in charge of it) such as managing the international relations. This allowed Manuel Dorrego to formally end the War with Brazil; otherwise it would have stayed an open war up to 1853. Rosas came later. The confusion may be located in the granting of the sum of public power given to Rosas in 1835, which gave him unlimited power. That's another and different thing. Rosas did not receive the power to manage international relations as part of the sum of public power. And, as it can be understood from this context, it was not an act of hegemony of Rosas (meaning, a politician doing things that he isn't legally or politically meant to do, but does so anyway because of his political power), but simply that, for good or bad, the Confederation was arranged that way. If there was an hegemony in this, it was the hegemony of Buenos Aires, which existed long before Rosas and remained long after him. MBelgrano (talk) 18:03, 29 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

Puerta and Camaño

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I have been checking this list with the info in the book "El final", listed in the bibliography, which makes an overall summary of the careers of all presidents and the way each one took and left government.

At page 263, it rejects the common idea of listing Puerta and Camaño as presidents, or the myth of the 5 presidents in 10 days. It states that neither the reading of the law of lack of president, the involved politicians or any constitutionalists agree with it: the idea accepted in those fields is that there were 3 presidents, De la Rúa, Rodríguez Saá and Duhalde.

The popular recognition to the "Five presidents" thing seems to have started at the US, where some TV humorist (not mentioned) was making jokes about Bush and mentioned a terrible fate for him, the one that took place in Argentina days before, with 5 presidents. The joke became popular, both in the US and in Argentina. After all, as the book points, if someone wants to provide shocking info to illustrate the chaotic days of 2001 in Argentina, 5 is more shocking than 3.

If we view things from this angle, it seems clear that Puerta and Camaño should be removed from here. The perspective of specialists take precedence over "popular" or shocking perspectives, if they are incorrect.

For a similar reason, I suggest removing as well the "Third Triumvirate" that ruled interim for 2 days. I have plenty of history books about the time period, and I have yet to find one making any mention of it. MBelgrano (talk) 02:41, 30 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

They should go and so does a so called Third Triumvirate. Unless there are un-impeachable sources as you well know. Rumors and common folklore don't belong in the list. -- Alexf(talk) 12:36, 11 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

Cisneros

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What should we do with Cisneros? Should we left him here, or remove him?

By one side, it is correct that he was president of a Junta. For just one day, rigth, but he wasn't meant to be interim (at least, not more than the Primera Junta itself; you surely know the details very well). He did make the oath of office and all the stuff.

On the other side, I doubt we will ever find any source including him as a head of state of Argentina of any nature. The "birth" of Argentina, the government regarded as the first national one, is the Primera Junta, headed by Saavedra, which was actually ousting the Cisneros junta. I included him a long time ago when I included as well a list of viceroys, my idea by then was to simply include anyone that ever ruled in the lands that would become Argentina; and the mention of Cisneros helped to understand the political chaos (the Junta ruled in Buenos Aires, but the Viceroy in Montevideo rejected such authorithy).

In more broad terms, the right question should be, when should we start counting heads of state? 9 of july of 1816? 25 of May of 1810? The creation of the viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata? The establishment of Buenos Aires? The viceroys of Peru? MBelgrano (talk) 22:31, 3 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

I favor starting the list with the First National Government, as Argentina officially recognises the first non-colonial predecessor state of modern Argentina. Salut, --IANVS (talk) 00:11, 4 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

Parties

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Other lists of heads of state include a colour scheme at the fields or at the side to note the political parties. I did not include it because in those other cases there are a handful of parties, but here there are so many that it would become a colourful rainbow that would say very little. But now that I think of it, we may reduce them all into a colour scheme of 5 parties (Federals, Unitarians, Justicialists, Radicals, and Military), by grouping alliances or split parties with their main ones. De la Rúa was elected with the Alianza, and Kirchner with the Front for Victory, but if seen from a global perspective I doubt anyone would reject grouping them with the radicals and peronists. MBelgrano (talk) 03:00, 8 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

Color code

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I strongly disagree with the proposed color code. It's oversimplifying to have the same color for Concordance governments and military governments, to reduce the Alianza to its UCR part, etc. Moreover, the trimming of the Affiliations box is brutal and unjustifiable. I'll remove until some sort of an accord can be established. --IANVS (talk) 16:59, 29 November 2010 (UTC)Reply

I have proposed this 20 days ago. If we use different colour codes for each specific small-lived party or political alliance, most colours would be used only once, becoming meaningless. After all, the relation of De la Rúa with the UCR is clear for everybody, regardless of the Frepaso presence in his government. A similar thing goes for the Concordance: the UCR was proscripted, they openly accepted that they made electoral fraud, and Justo had been already involved with the 1930 coup, who would deny that they are related? It would be easier if we were like Uruguay, with just Blancos and Colorados (and now the Frente Amplio) from the civil wars to modern day, but we aren't.
In any case, this simplification applies only to the colours. There is a box at each entry to detail which specific party or alliance was the one in government each time. MBelgrano (talk) 18:42, 29 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Re the box at entry, the previous version should stay, it was far more informative and useful. The color code can be overimposed over that same table. Simplificating Argentine parties and alliances to that minimum denominator you proposed is absurd and ultimately useless. BTW; the code should at least be discussed first at talk page. For example, Concordance was an alliance of parties not related to the military, except for the figure of Justo. Nor it was its project linked to Uriburu's coup. Salut, --IANVS (talk) 20:04, 29 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
Have in mind that many readers at this project may not be much aware of Argentine politics: they may recognize Cristina, Néstor, Perón, perhaps Galtieri, and not many more. And for a stranger, all party names would seem like equal things, they wouldn't be able to recognize the "main" party and the secondary small parties that came from those unless we point so. Without a code that simplifies things, people would have to think that Cámpora, Menem and Kirchner are all from unrelated parties, or that Alfonsín, De la Rúa and Frondizi are from different parties as well. Which may be true, but only from a purely technical/legalist way. In either case, it's always peronism and radicalism each. All people recognize it that way, and the code is a good way to reflect that. Our number of parties is not as stable as in Uruguay, but it isn't either as chaotic as this list with so much parties would suggest to the unaware foreign reader MBelgrano (talk) 02:47, 30 November 2010 (UTC)Reply
I'm not opposed to group Peronists and Radicals under a single color code, for example, but some clarifications have to be made and some questions arise. For example, the Alianza was not solely the UCR, and that has to be noted; considering the logic you propose for labeling the De la Rúa period as a radical period, we also should not that the UCR-Antipersonalista was government during the Concertación period... so ¿should the Ortíz government be coded as a radical government?
I favor that some historic formations (peronists, radicals, etc.) are to be labeled under a single code color, but a more detailed account of the particular governmental formations (such as the current affiliations infobox) should remain, as they are a positive improvement for the better understanding of the different periods and variable coalitions in Argentina. I propose mixing the two infobox proposals.
Re the adscriptions
  1. Pedernera was Unitarian, at least until Caseros. Although I don't know under what affiliation did he became Vice-President under Derqui, but I doubt he should be labeled as Federal.
  2. Avellaneda was from the National Party (a liberal party).... by the same logic, Sarmiento can also be adscribed as liberal.
  3. Mitre was from the Autonomist Party, as far as I know (same logic regarding his liberal position as in Avellaneda and Sarmiento)
Regarding the last two cases, if we are to take into account the political views of the governments instead of their formal adscription, then we'd have to distinguish R. Sáenz Peña and F. Alcorta from the other PAN governments (also C. Pellegrini); C. Menem from most other Peronist governments; the "Lomos Negros" from Rosista Federals, etc.
Salut, --IANVS (talk) 03:18, 30 November 2010 (UTC).Reply

Proposal

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Here a proposal for the color key box format. The "liberal" grouping is quite vague, but it should include Mitre, Sarmiento and Avellaneda. I did not incluide the PAN under "Conservative", because it was actually a big tent party that mostly behave as a Latin American 19th Century Liberal Party (Church-State separation, Education policies, Foreign Trade and Investment, etc.). Any further information about Pedernera's or Mitre's actual affiliations? BTW, I think we should background colour the "affiliations" column on the table, creating one extra column for this is excessive. Salut, --IANVS (talk) 08:28, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Colour key
(for political parties)

  Federal (19th Century Federals)
  Unitarian (19th Century Centralists)
  Liberal - Liberal Party? National Party? (19th Century Liberals)
  National Autonomist Party (1874–1916)
  Radicals - UCR (founded 1891), UCR-A (1924–1946), UCRI (1956–1972), UCRP (1957–1972), Alianza (UCR, FREPASO) (1997–2001)
  Conservative - Concordancia (UCR-A, PSI, PDN) (1931–1943), PDN (1931–1955)
  Peronists - Laborist (1945–1947), PJ (founded 1947), FJL (1972–1974), FPV (since 2003)
  Military (Acting on behalf of the Armed Forces)

It seems right, but check again the way things were arranged before. The colour code was not included as a new column, it was placed inside the column of the order number. We may ask somewhere how to make it more narrow, if it was too big. I took the basic code from List of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom, which was pointed to me as an example of how should a featured list be, but for some reason that list makes smaller columns than here. Besides, adding colour to the whole row makes it more difficult to read the text inside, and should be used just for tables with rows of a single line each (not the case here).

I will check the affiliations things in some days. MBelgrano (talk) 12:00, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Date of Quintana's term ending.

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On Quintana's page (http://en.wiki.x.io/wiki/Manuel_Quintana), it states that Quintana died in office on 3/12/1906). In the list of Argentine Presidents, it has him resigning on 1/25/1906. Does anyone know which is the correct date that Quintana left office and was succeeded by José Figueroa Alcorta? Jtyroler (talk) 07:06, 22 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

"Free" elections

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Hi. This list states that Kirchner and Fernández, etc, were elected by "direct free elections". By law, in Argentina elections are not free, but mandatory. --Againme (talk) 21:34, 23 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

"Free" means that there were no anomalies in the elections, such as fraud (as with Justo or Ortiz) or proscriptions (as with Justo or Frondizi). If you check the whole table, not just the last two entries, you will notice that each one points the way each head of state got to power. Cambalachero (talk) 00:21, 24 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

In fact the mandatory are the vote, not the elections, that is a vital difference--152.170.10.135 (talk) 21:04, 23 June 2017 (UTC)Reply

File:Jorge Rafael Videla.jpg Nominated for Deletion

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File:Galtieri.jpg Nominated for Deletion

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"Indirect Proscribed Elections"

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Can we define this in the article? I understand the "indirect" part, but what do "proscribed" elections entail? --Lacarids (talk) 02:15, 21 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Peer Review

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I'd like to add this list for peer reviewing so as to make it to the featured lists, but I forgot the user account I used to use here in WP. If someone can help on this one, I'd be most grateful. Salut, 181.95.113.137 (talk) 02:20, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

There were some comments in Wikipedia:Featured list candidates/List of heads of state of Argentina/archive1 Cambalachero (talk) 02:39, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply
Ok, MBelgrano (right?). I've read it, but I think the list is quite improved since then. Maybe the intro should be somewhat trimmed. But I'd like some reviewing of the list as it stands right now. Salut, --181.95.113.137 (talk) 03:05, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

"Free elections"

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Elections, by law, are not free in Argentina; they are mandatory. Maybe this should be addressed... --181.47.180.243 (talk) 08:59, 26 February 2015 (UTC)Reply

Mate, by law the vote are mandatory, not the election, the election is free, you are forced to vote but by whoever you want--152.170.10.135 (talk) 21:06, 23 June 2017 (UTC)Reply

Heads of State

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I think that if article's name is Heads of State we should add provisional presidents (such as Puerta, Camaño and Pinedo) to the list. Because a provisional (or ar in charge interim) president it's indeed a head of state!

Wikipediow (talk) 05:19, 22 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

They are provisional presidents of the Senate, not of the Republic--152.170.10.135 (talk) 21:08, 23 June 2017 (UTC)Reply

Heads of State

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So Camaño and Puerta have been added but Pinedo is remaining.

Wikipediow (talk) 20:54, 12 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

Why is Federico Pinedo included among the list of presidents?

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Why did you include Federico Pinedo among the list of head of states even though the official Presidential website doesn't include him?--Joseph Solis in Australia (talk) 11:09, 21 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

@Joseph Solis in Australia: The list says heads of state of Argentina, for 12 hours, Pinedo was the president of Argentina, there is plenty of RS saying so even though the Casa Rosada website doesn't. - SantiLak (talk) 20:16, 21 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
Suuuuure, let's ignore the official website. This went too far. Pinedonotpresident (talk) 00:28, 22 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
If Pinedo wasn't the head of state then neither were Puerta or Camaño, but they were the head of state, the casa rosada website not listing him doesn't change reality, but don't tell Pinedonotpresident that.- SantiLak (talk) 00:31, 22 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
Puerta and Camaño were head of state because there wasn't a president at the time. Pinedo wasn't head of state because Macri was president. See, there can't be two heads of state at the same time. This is simple, the *legal*, *official*, *judicial*, and *academic* sources mention that Pinedo wasn't president. Some *media* mention that he was. And for you what media says prevails. Suuuuuure, dude. Let's edit Dewey's article, he was president. Pinedonotpresident (talk) 00:35, 22 July 2017 (UTC) PS: For more, see the first section of this talk... 2004, also section #6 from 2010. You are breaking a clear consensus here.Reply
There was no president, Macri wasn't sworn in and CFK's term ended, a judge said Pinedo would act as president for those 12 hours and as he was in the position of head of state, Pinedo should be listed. It is pretty simple, RS and the judiciary call him the acting president, but you with no judicial or academic sources come and say that because of semantics, he wasn't acting president because the title doesn't exist specifically in Argentine law and because of that we should ignore reality in which he was acting president. You also seem to keep on bringing up Dewey, if you're going to try and ridicule me, at least use an accurate example in which the person held the power of the presidency, something that Dewey never did. Also the casa rosada website lists Camaño and Puerta, but hey lets just ignore that and listen to three total users, which by the way doesn't make consensus. I await your furious response claiming i'm an idiot who can't read. Cheers - SantiLak (talk) 00:52, 22 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
Oh, so you are taking it personal... Anyway, you said that is was a "fair point" the argument about Macri having a full 4-year term, now you said that there was no president. Yes, now you contradict yourself... Let's add one more to the count. Let's see...
-"There was no president". FALSE. Macri was. Remember, you said "fair point"...
-"judge said Pinedo would act as president for those 12 hours and as he was in the position of head of state". FALSE. No word of the judge regarding head of state.
-"judiciary call him the acting president". FALSE. No word of the judge regarding "acting president".
-"you with no judicial or academic sources". FALSE. Judge rule is my source and I also presented two sources from constitutional experts.
-"say that because of semantics". FALSE. I never said this is about semantics.
-"ignore reality in which he was acting president". FALSE. We should ignore fiction in which he was acting president.
-"at least use an accurate example in which the person held the power of the presidency". That's exactly my point. Media said that for someone who even didn't held the power of president. So, yes, let's trust the media.
-"casa rosada website lists Camaño and Puerta, but hey lets just ignore that". FALSE. I just explained about this. That's the opposite of ignoring.
-"listen to three total users". FALSE. I'm counting more. Either way, this is more than one user...
Pinedonotpresident (talk) 01:13, 22 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
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A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion

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This article is one of the worst articles of wikipedia presidents that were not, etc.

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First of all I am Argentine, I know more than many of you who are foreigners. The chronology of presidents is really bad, terrible even. The list has rulers who were not presidents and who did not consider themselves heads of state. There are presidents who are of more than they exerted like official presidents (Rawson, Louder, Pinedo, Alfredo Oscar Saint-Jean, Carlos Alberto Lacoste, Horacio Tomás Liendo, Enrique Martinez, Marcos Paz, Coornelio Saavedra, Domingo Matheu, Feliciano Chiclana, Sarratea, Paso, Pueyrredón, Nicolás Rodríguez Peña, Antonio Álvarez Jonte, Gervasio Antonio de Posadas, Juan Larrea, Carlos María De Alvear, San Martín, Matias de Irigoyen, Rondeau, Sarratea, Alvarez Thomas, Aguirre, Balcarce, Ildefonso Ramos Mexia, Estaninslao Soler, Dorrego, LAs Heras, Martin Rodriguez, VIcente Lopez Y Planes, Juan LAvalle, Viamonte, Rosas, Maza and Pedernera and their repeated mandates, etc.) The chronology begins in 1826 and the list of OFFICIAL PRESIDENTS RECOGNIZED BY THE HOUSE OF GOVERNMENT AND BELOW I WILL LEAVE THE LINK IS THIS:

Bernardino Rivadavia (1826-1827) Justo José de Urquiza (1854-1860) Santiago Derqui (1860-1861) Bartolomé Mitre (1862-1868) Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1868-1874) Nicolas Avellaneda (1874-1880) Julio Argentino Roca (1880-1886) Miguel Juarez Celman (1886-1890) Carlos Pellegrini (1890-1892) Luis Saenz Peña (1892-1895) José Evaristo Uriburu (1895-1898) Julio Argentino Roca (1898-1904) Manuel Quintana (1904-1906) Victorino De La Plaza (1906-1910) Roque Saenz Peña (1910-1914) Victorino De La PLaza (1914-1916) Hipólito Yrigoyen (1916-1922) Marcelo Torcuato De Alvear (1922-1928) Hipólito Yrigoyen (1928-1930) José Felix Uriburu (De Facto) (1930-1932) Agustín Pedro Justo (1932-1938) Pedro Marcelino Ortiz (1938-1942) Ramón S. Castillo (1942-1943) Pedro Pablo Ramirez (De Facto) (1943-1944) Edelmiro Farrell (De Facto) (1944-1946) Juan Domingo Perón (1946-1952) Juan Domingo Perón (1952-1955) Eduardo Lonardi (De Facto) (1955) Pedro Eugenio Aramburu (De Facto) (1955-1958) Arturo Frondizi (1958-1962) José María Guido (1962-1963) Arturo Umberto Illia (1963-1966) Juan Carlos Onganía (De Facto) (1966-1970) Roberto Marcelo Levingston (De Facto) (1970-1971) Alejandro Agustín Lanusse (De Facto) (1971-1973) Hector José Campora (1973) Juan Domingo Perón (1973-1974) María Estela Martinez De Perón (1974-1976) Jorge Rafael Videla (De Facto) (1976-1981) Roberto Eduardo Viola (De Facto) (1981) Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri (De Facto) (1981-1982) Reynaldo Benito Bignone (De Facto) (1982-1983) Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín (1983-1989) Carlos Saúl Menem (1989-1995) Carlos Saúl Menem (1995-1999) Fernando De La Rúa (1999-2001) Federico Ramón Puerta (2001) Eduardo Oscar Camaño (2001) Eduardo Alberto Duahlde (2002-2003) Néstor Carlos Kirchner (2003-2007) Cristina Fernández De Kirchner (2007-2011) Cristina Fernández De Kirchner (2011-2015) Mauricio Macri (2015-Present) Link Of The Source: https://www.casarosada.gob.ar/nuestro-pais/galeria-de-presidentes — Preceding unsigned comment added by Manuel francisco garcia blaya (talkcontribs) 14:29, 7 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Perón's last vice president

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In the table, Juan Perón's last vice president, Alberto Teisaire, is shown as serving from May 7, 1954 to September 16, 1955. But the article on Teisaire says that he held on until he resigned on September 23, the same date that Eduardo Lonardi, the leader of the coup, moved up from provisional president to "official" president. Even though Lonardi obviously didn't want him, Teisaire was still constitutionally the vice president for those three days that Lonardi was provisional president.

I believe that Teisaire should be shown as having served from May 7, 1954 to September 23, 1955, and that he should be shown as vice president during Lonardi's three days as provisional president. I tried for many hours to edit the table accordingly, and could not do so. Could somebody with more knowledge do the editing, or is there some reason this cannot be changed? Rontrigger (talk) 08:59, 23 August 2020 (UTC)Reply