Former Argentine president Nestor Kirchner launched his campaign for a congressional seat on Thursday night in a bid to rejuvenate the sagging popularity of the woman who succeeded him — his wife, Cristina Fernandez.
The entry of Kirchner, who was widely popular as president from 2003 to 2007, has transformed what was once a sleepy midterm election into a referendum on Fernandez’s left-leaning government and its struggling efforts to exert more control over the economy.
“Never in my life did I consider being a candidate for deputy, but I’m not one to step down from a battle,” Kirchner said in a televised address from the city of La Plata.
“I’m going to the Chamber of Deputies full of love for country, for Argentines, the province of Buenos Aires, and to give it all I’ve got, with the same passion as always,” he said, surrounded by ebullient congressional candidates for the ruling Peronist party and applauded from the stands by his wife.
Kirchner hopes to parlay the good will he built up when he led Argentina’s strong recovery from a 2001 to 2002 economic meltdown triggered by a record-setting US$95 billion loan default and a steep currency devaluation.
His popularity was a factor in his wife’s October 2007 election to the president’s office, a victory at the ballot box that gave her even stronger backing in Congress than her husband had.
But a yearlong conflict with farmers and the ill effects of the global financial crisis have battered Fernandez’s standing. Only 30 percent of voters support her, down from 50 percent when she became president, the most recent poll by Poliarquia in February showed. The survey had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.
Recent high-profile defections from the Peronist coalition have chipped away at her ample majority in congress, and lawmakers failed to pass a grain export tax hike that Fernandez proposed last year.
Her own vice president cast the deciding vote in the Senate that killed the tax plan.
By heading the Peronist legislative slate in Buenos Aires Province — home to more than a third of the country’s voters and a traditional stronghold of the power couple — Kirchner is taking center stage in what he is making a high-stakes election contest.
Kirchner beamed confidence on Thursday night that the Peronist coalition would maintain its majority when voters elect half the 256-member Chamber of Deputies and a third of the 72-member Senate on June 28.
“We’re going to govern with all our strength and willpower to continue the transformation and reconstruction of Argentina,” he said.
Archeologists in Peru on Thursday said they found the 5,000-year-old remains of a noblewoman at the sacred city of Caral, revealing the important role played by women in the oldest center of civilization in the Americas. “What has been discovered corresponds to a woman who apparently had elevated status, an elite woman,” archeologist David Palomino said. The mummy was found in Aspero, a sacred site within the city of Caral that was a garbage dump for more than 30 years until becoming an archeological site in the 1990s. Palomino said the carefully preserved remains, dating to 3,000BC, contained skin, part of the
TRUMP EFFECT: The win capped one of the most dramatic turnarounds in Canadian political history after the Conservatives had led the Liberals by more than 20 points Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney yesterday pledged to win US President Donald Trump’s trade war after winning Canada’s election and leading his Liberal Party to another term in power. Following a campaign dominated by Trump’s tariffs and annexation threats, Carney promised to chart “a new path forward” in a world “fundamentally changed” by a US that is newly hostile to free trade. “We are over the shock of the American betrayal, but we should never forget the lessons,” said Carney, who led the central banks of Canada and the UK before entering politics earlier this year. “We will win this trade war and
‘BODIES EVERYWHERE’: The incident occurred at a Filipino festival celebrating an anti-colonial leader, with the driver described as a ‘lone suspect’ known to police Canadian police arrested a man on Saturday after a car plowed into a street party in the western Canadian city of Vancouver, killing a number of people. Authorities said the incident happened shortly after 8pm in Vancouver’s Sunset on Fraser neighborhood as members of the Filipino community gathered to celebrate Lapu Lapu Day. The festival, which commemorates a Filipino anti-colonial leader from the 16th century, falls this year on the weekend before Canada’s election. A 30-year-old local man was arrested at the scene, Vancouver police wrote on X. The driver was a “lone suspect” known to police, a police spokesperson told journalists at the
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has unveiled a new naval destroyer, claiming it as a significant advancement toward his goal of expanding the operational range and preemptive strike capabilities of his nuclear-armed military, state media said yesterday. North Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said Kim attended the launching ceremony for the 5,000-tonne warship on Friday at the western port of Nampo. Kim framed the arms buildup as a response to perceived threats from the US and its allies in Asia, who have been expanding joint military exercises amid rising tensions over the North’s nuclear program. He added that the acquisition