Argentines hope new leader brings stability
Néstor Kirchner, governor of Santa Cruz, becomes president on May 25.
By Brian Byrnes | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
BUENOS AIRES - Nothing comes easy in Argentina these days. Even holding a simple election.
This Sunday's vote was supposed to put to rest 18 months of turmoil that
saw five different presidents, massive debt default, a bank
freeze, soaring unemployment, and sharp increases in crime and hunger.
Now that election won't happen. Former President Carlos Menem, who was
trying to recapture the office he held throughout the 1990s,
bowed out of the race Wednesday after lagging far behind in the polls.
This paves the way for Néstor Kirchner, governor of the wealthy
province of Santa Cruz, to take office May 25.
The furor caused by the last-minute departure by Mr. Menem - who helped
Argentina out of economic crisis only to create a brand-new set
of problems - reflects a growing disenchantment with the country's leaders
and their often self-serving ways. Most here see his withdrawal
as a face-saving effort to avoid an election drubbing in Sunday's two-man
runoff - at the expense of the electoral process.
Observers say that most Argentines are simply looking for stability now
and believe the solid if uncharismatic Kirchner can provide that, at
least in the near term.
"I think it is going to be a middle-of-the-road government," says José
Nun, an Argentine political scientist and former professor at the
University of Toronto. Kirchner is expected to continue many of the stabilizing
policies of his predecessor, President Eduardo Duhalde.
Honest and responsible
Widely viewed as honest and fiscally responsible, the lanky Kirchner talks
with a lisp and often appears awkward and aloof on television.
He does not wow voters with slick political rhetoric, which may partly
explain his appeal. Mr. Menem drove fast cars and is married to a
former Miss Universe.
Mr. Nun says Kirchner's policies are likely to mirror those of Mr. Duhalde,
who made small steps to reverse the economic stagnation that
has plagued the country for five years. By keeping Economics Minister Roberto
Lavagna in place, Kirchner will allow negotiations with
foreign investors and the International Monetary Fund over the country's
$141 billion debt default to continue uninterrupted.
Duhalde also helped establish better regional trade - notably with Brazil
- a trend that Kirchner says he will continue. Kirchner is expected
to work hard to strengthen ties within Mercosur, a regional trade pact
made up of Argentina's neighboring countries. He has already
traveled to Brazil and Chile to meet the presidents of those countries.
Kirchner campaigned on the fiscal strength of his oil-rich Patagonian province
which he governed for the past 12 years. As president,
Kirchner plans to spend money on public-works projects and build 3 million
homes in four years, which he predicts will create 5 million
jobs. One in 5 Argentines is currently without work.
Kirchner is critical of foreign companies and says the country needs its
own industries to move beyond the crisis. He also says he may
try to return to government control some companies that were privatized
under Menem, such as the rail system.
Kirchner's province of Santa Cruz has one of the highest standards of living
in Argentina - thanks in large part to its natural resources - and
Kirchner wants to duplicate that nationwide. But opponents say that will
be hard because the country is broke.
"This will be the first time that Kirchner has to govern without money,
because we have always had a lot of money in Santa Cruz," says
Omar Muniz, a legislator in Santa Cruz.
Carries a big stick
Critics also say that Kirchner's clean image, which he touted on the campaign trail, may be overblown.
Roberto Giubetich, an opposition legislator, says Kirchner used provincial
funds to pay for campaign travel and TV ads. "I don't believe him
with his rhetoric based on his honesty," he says Kirchner denies these
charges.
Kirchner also carries a big stick. Critics say he used his political appointees
and powerful family base - his wife is a senator and his sister
the minister of social affairs - to suppress dissension in the local legislature
and media. This kind of control will not be as easy on the
national level, as he comes to office without an election mandate, receiving
only 22 percent of the vote in April's five-person first-round
election.
Still, Kirchner is squeaky clean compared with Menem, who was dogged by
allegations of corruption for years. He spent six months under
house arrest in 2001 over gun-smuggling charges that were later dropped.
As president from 1989 to 1999, he was credited with quashing inflation
and opening Argentina up to significant foreign investment. Many
Argentines purchased their first cars and took their first trips abroad
thanks to the peso's one-to-one peg to the dollar. But many here
blame him for the country's current economic crisis. Because of the peso-to-dollar
peg, Argentina couldn't print money to cover
expenditures as it had done before. Instead it borrowed wildly, saddling
the country with it's current debt.
Now Argentina hopes for better things from their new president. "It's going
to be hard...." says Martin Badia, a graphic designer. "I hope
Kirchner is honest and he does the best for the people, not for himself
- like everyone else who has been in power before."