2007 Buenos Aires City elections

2007 Buenos Aires City elections

Mayoral election
3 June 2007 (first round)
24 June 2007 (second round)
Turnout70.01% (first round)
68.38% (second round)
 
Nominee Mauricio Macri Daniel Filmus
Party CpC PJ
Alliance PRO Front for Victory
Running mate Gabriela Michetti Carlos Heller
Popular vote 1,007,729 645,779
Percentage 60.94% 39.06%

Second round results by electoral circunscription

Chief of Government before election

Jorge Telerman
PJ

Elected Chief of Government

Mauricio Macri
CpCPRO

City Legislature
3 June 2007

30 out of 60 seats in the City Legislature
Turnout73.15%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
PRO Mauricio Macri 44.32 15 +2
DpBA Aníbal Ibarra 14.44 4 New
FPV-PJ Daniel Filmus 10.76 3 −4
MBA Jorge Telerman 9.95 3 New
CC Elisa Carrió 8.59 2
MST Patricia Walsh 4.04 1 +1
BAPT Claudio Lozano 2.97 1 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

General elections were held in the City of Buenos Aires on 3 June 2007 to elect the Chief of Government (mayor) and half of the City Legislature to four-year terms. As no mayoral candidate won a majority in the first round, a runoff was held on 31 July 2011, in which Mauricio Macri, of the Commitment to Change (CpC) party, defeated Daniel Filmus of the Front for Victory (FPV) coalition to be elected as Chief of Government of Buenos Aires.

Incumbent Jorge Telerman, who had assumed office just over a year prior to the election following the impeachment of Aníbal Ibarra over repercussions from the 2004 Cromañón nightclub fire, sought re-election but was defeated in the first round.

Background

The 2003 elections in Buenos Aires resulted in the re-election of progressive former prosecutor and mayor Aníbal Ibarra, of the Broad Front, in the run-off against centre-right businessman and former Boca Juniors president Mauricio Macri, of Commitment to Change (CpC).

Just a year later, however, the Cromañón nightclub fire sent shockwaves through the political establishment of Buenos Aires and led to Ibarra's suspension from office in 2005 and eventual impeachment in 2006, amid accusations of corruption and negligence.[1] Ibarra was replaced by his deputy, Jorge Telerman.[2]

As the existing political alliances had crumbled in the aftermath of Cromañón, Telerman sought re-election on the Civic Coalition ticket, with former mayor Enrique Olivera as running mate,[3] while Macri and his CpC party, now part of the Republican Proposal alliance, geared up for a second attempt at the mayorship.[4] The peronist Front for Victory nominated sociologist and national education minister Daniel Filmus, deputised by labour leader Carlos Heller.[5]

Candidates

Coalition Mayoral candidate (party)
Prior political experience
Vice mayoral candidate (party)
Prior political experience
Parties
Mauricio Macri (CPC)
National Deputy (2005–2007)
Gabriela Michetti (CPC)
City Legislator (2003–2007)
Daniel Filmus (PJ)
Minister of Education (2003–2007)
Carlos Heller (PSOL)
President of Banco Credicoop (since 2005)
Jorge Telerman (PJ)
Chief of Government (2006–2007)
Enrique Olivera (ARI)
Chief of Government (1999–2000)
Patricia Walsh (MST)
National Deputy (2001–2005)
Héctor Bidonde (MST)
City Legislator (2003–2007)
Claudio Lozano (BAPT)
National Deputy (2003–2015)
María América González (BAPT)
National Deputy (1997–2003)
  • BAPT

Results

Chief of Government

CandidateRunning matePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Mauricio MacriGabriela MichettiPRO Alliance798,29245.761,007,72960.94
Daniel FilmusCarlos HellerFront for Victory–Dialogue for Buenos Aires414,20523.75645,77939.06
Jorge TelermanEnrique OliveraMore for Buenos Aires–Civic Coalition360,73420.68
Patricia WalshHéctor BidondeWorkers' Socialist Movement51,4652.95
Claudio LozanoMaría América GonzálezBuenos Aires for All47,5052.72
Lía MéndezNéstor Jorge AvellaHumanist Party16,3460.94
Marcelo RamalVanina BiasiWorkers' Party15,6230.90
Guillermo CherashnyMiguel Ángel Ramón GómezPorteño Consensus Party6,4710.37
Christian CastilloCarlos ArtachoSocialist Workers' Party6,1510.35
Jorge SelserAdrián CampsAuthentic Socialist Party5,9250.34
José CastilloJorge Guidobono ReyRevolutionary Socialist Left Front5,7690.33
Héctor HeberlingAndrea Fabiana SalminiSocialist Advance Movement3,3170.19
Rubén Oscar SaboulardHéctor Guillermo BullrichIndependent Justice and Dignity Movement2,9490.17
Enrique VenturinoCarlos HoyosCitizens' Front2,3830.14
Juan Carlos BeicaEsilda Raquel BustosSocialist Convergence2,2000.13
Javier Ernesto BrodskyArturo José PécoraPopular Concertation2,0280.12
Juan Ricardo MussaMaría Daniel LlanosCitizen Action1,8100.10
Graciela PatanéHilda Orlinda OatesThe Movement1,1830.07
Total1,744,356100.001,653,508100.00
Valid votes1,744,35696.811,653,50894.01
Invalid votes27,1321.5152,0452.96
Blank votes30,3471.6853,3343.03
Total votes1,801,835100.001,758,887100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,573,73170.012,573,73168.34
Source: [6][7]

Legislature

Party Votes % Seats
Not up Won Total
Republican Proposal Alliance 768,748 44.32 13 15 28
Dialogue for Buenos Aires 250,471 14.44 New 5 5
Front for Victory 172,642 10.76 7 3 8
More Buenos Aires 227,430 9.95 New 3 3
Civic Coalition 148,899 8.59 8 2 10
Socialist Workers' Movement 70,065 4.04 0 1 1
Buenos Aires for All 51,506 2.97 0 1 1
Workers' Party 18,927 1.09 0 0 0
Humanist Party 17,981 1.04 0 0 0
Authentic Socialist Party 7,253 0.42 0 0 0
Socialist Workers' Party 6,585 0.38 0 0 0
Revolutionary Socialist Left Front 6,484 0.37 0 0 0
Porteño Consensus Party 6,241 0.36 0 0 0
Movement for Socialism 3,532 0.20 0 0 0
Independent Justice and Dignity Movement 3,191 0.18 0 0 0
Movement for Dignity and Independence 2,818 0.16 0 0 0
Porteño Commitment 2,789 0.16 0 0 0
Socialist Convergence 2,650 0.15 0 0 0
Socialist Convergence 2,650 0.15 0 0 0
Citizen Action 1,965 0.11 0 0 0
Call to Social Integration 1,431 0.08 0 0 0
The Movement 1,247 0.07 0 0 0
Blank votes 40,138
Invalid votes 27,303
Total 1,801,835 100 30 30 60
Registered voters/turnout 2,573,731 70.01
Source: [6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Castro, Ángeles (8 March 2006). "La Legislatura destituyó a Ibarra". La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  2. ^ "Con menciones a Cromañón, Telerman asumió la jefatura porteña". Infobae (in Spanish). 13 March 2006. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  3. ^ Rodríguez, Santiago (11 April 2007). ""El camino es la coalición"". Página 12 (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  4. ^ Sabanés, Lisandro (19 March 2024). "Breve historia del PRO y el dolor de ya no ser, ¿hay futuro?". Letra P (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  5. ^ "Se consumó la pareja de Filmus y Heller para el gobierno porteño". Página 12 (in Spanish). 4 April 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2025.
  6. ^ a b "Elecciones 2007". tsjbaires.gov.ar (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2022.
  7. ^ "Elecciones 2007 (segunda vuelta)". tsjbaires.gov.ar (in Spanish). Tribunal Superior de Justicia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 June 2022.