Casa Rosada is the Government Office.
You know that, I know that. The world knows it.
President Duhalde, did not.
Casa Rosada is the Government Office.
In other words: Duhalde (was he the 45th or 46th President ? Lost count at how many Presidents the Argentine Republic has) was & still is a Dumbass.You know that, I know that. The world knows it.
President Duhalde, did not.
In other words: Duhalde (was he the 45th or 46th President ? Lost count at how many Presidents the Argentine Republic has) was & still is a Dumbass.
Basically the list of Argentine Republic Presidents since 1946 as follows:Yes.
He remains the only drug kingpin and embezzler to end up cripplingly indebted to his under bosses. Not even Maduro or Biden have managed to hold an L so massive.
Basically the list of Argentine Republic Presidents since 1946 as follows:
29.) Juan Domingo Peron (June 4th, 1946 to September 21st, 1955): Ousted in coup d'etat
30.) Eduardo Lonardi (September 23rd, 1955 to November 13th, 1955): Ousted in coup d'etat
31.) Pedro Eugenio Aramburu (November 13th, 1955 to May 1st, 1958)
32.) Arturo Frondizi (May 1st, 1958 to March 29th, 1962): Ousted in coup d'etat
33.) Arturo Illia (October 12th, 1963 to June 28th, 1966): Ousted in coup d'etat
34.) Juan Carlos Ongania (June 29th, 1966 to June 8th, 1970): Ousted in coup d'etat just eight days after Aramburu assassination.
35.) Roberto M. Levingston (June 18th, 1970 to March 21st, 1971): Ousted in coup d'etat
36.) Alejandro Agustin Lanusse (March 26th, 1971 to May 25th, 1973)
37.) Hector Campora (May 25th, 1973 to July 13th, 1973): Resigned to path the way for JDP's comeback.
38.) Juan Domingo Peron (October 12th, 1973 to July 1st, 1974): Died in office during 3rd term.
39.) Isabel Martinez de Peron (July 1st, 1974 to March 24th, 1976): First female President; Ousted in coup d'etat.
40.) Jorge Rafael Videla (March 29th, 1976 to March 29th, 1981)
41.) Roberto Viola (March 29th, 1981 to December 11th, 1981): Ousted in coup d'etat.
42.) Leopoldo Galtieri (December 22nd, 1981 to June 18th, 1982): Forced to resign following the Falklands War defeat.
43.) Reynaldo Bignone (July 1st, 1982 to December 10th, 1983)
44.) Raul Alfonsin (December 10th, 1983 to July 8th, 1989)
45.) Carlos Menem (July 8th, 1989 to December 10th, 1999)
46.) Fernando de la Rua (December 10th, 1999 to December 21st, 2001)
47.) Eduardo Duhalde (January 2nd, 2002 to May 23rd, 2003)
48.) Nestor Kirchner (May 23rd, 2003 to December 10th, 2007)
49.) Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (December 10th, 2007 to December 10th, 2015): Second female President; served two full four-year terms.
50.) Mauricio Macri (December 10th, 2015 to December 10th, 2019)
51.) Alberto Fernandez (since December 10th, 2019)
The Argentine Republic: Lots of history, lots of craziness, lots of super secret fantasies & escapades.We also reboot our criteria for where the proper First President is on the timeline every ten years.
So don't sweat it, Argentinians don't