Friday, November 2, 2007
Argentina’s First Lady Elected President
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the wife of Argentina’s president, Néstor Kirchner, has become the first woman to be elected president in the country’s history, according to the latest official results published today.
Mrs. Kirchner, 54, the center-left Peronist party candidate and a senator, defeated a fractured opposition and avoided a runoff.
With 96 percent of the voting locations reporting, Mrs. Kirchner had 45 percent, ahead of Elisa Carrió, a center-left congresswoman, who had 23 percent, and Roberto Lavagna, a former finance minister, who had 17 percent, according to figures from the Ministry of Interior.
Mrs. Kirchner needed 45 percent of the vote outright, or 40 percent with at least a 10 percentage-point lead, to avoid a runoff.
Rival candidates accused her party of “theft” of ballots and other irregularities.
Mrs. Kirchner is the second woman to be elected leader of a South American nation in two years, after Michelle Bachelet, who became president of Chile last year. Read on @ New York Times
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2 comments:
I think its ridiculous that the opposing parties think automatically that she stole ballots, tha there was theft involved...do you think maybe it was just because she was good enough. More power to her for being the first female president in that country. To everyone that thought she was cheating, "Suck it up."
Well, I'm sure that she is a women had something to do with the "cheating" claims, but really in the end its no different than in our country.
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