2000 Buenos Aires City elections

General elections were held in the City of Buenos Aires on 7 May 2000 to elect the Chief of Government (mayor) and entirety of the City Legislature.

2000 Buenos Aires City elections

Mayoral election
← 1996
7 May 2000
2003 →
Turnout73.20%
 
Nominee Aníbal Ibarra Domingo Cavallo Irma Roy
Party Broad Front AR PAIS
Alliance Alliance EplC
Running mate Cecilia Felgueras Gustavo Béliz José Castiñeira de Dios
Popular vote 884,883 595,775 82,482
Percentage 49.30% 33.20% 4.59%

Results of the Chief of Government election by electoral circuit.

Chief of Government before election

Enrique Olivera
UCR–Alliance

Elected Chief of Government

Aníbal Ibarra
FG–Alliance

City Legislature
← 1997
7 May 2000
2003 →

All 60 seats in the City Legislature
Turnout73.20%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Alliance Aníbal Ibarra 36.66 24 −13
EplC Domingo Cavallo 30.82 20 +9
PAIS Irma Roy 6.68 4 +4
IU Patricia Walsh 4.43 2 +2
Ucedé Álvaro Alsogaray 4.16 2 +2
BApT Antonio Cartañá 2.98 2 New
MJyD Jorge Daniel Mercado 2.98 2 +2
PGI Juliana Marino 2.67 1 New
PHE Lía Méndez 2.22 1 +1
PJ Raúl Granillo Ocampo 2.09 1 −10
FUT-PO Jorge Altamira 2.05 1 +1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

In the mayoral election, former prosecutor Aníbal Ibarra, of the Alliance, won in the first round of voting with 49.30% of the vote. According to the city's constitution, a candidate for Chief of Government must achieve over 50% of the vote in order to win in the first round, and thus Ibarra should have gone on to face the second-most voted candidate, former economy minister Domingo Cavallo of Action for the Republic. Cavallo had initially angrily denied the first round's results, which he called "a fraud". However, following backlash against his comments from other candidates, he dropped out of the race for the second round and ceded victory to Ibarra.

This was only the second general election in the City of Buenos Aires and the first since the adoption of the 1996 Constitution.

Background

The 1996 elections in Buenos Aires were the first held in the city's history to elect local authorities, following the 1994 amendment of the Constitution of Argentina which granted autonomy to the city and allowed it to vote for its own head of government and legislature. The election resulted saw Radical Civic Union senator Fernando de la Rúa become the city's first democratically-elected mayor and the FREPASO coalition of progressive and left-leaning parties become the largest bloc in the Constitutional Convention, which was tasked with writing and adopting a new Constitution for the newly-autonomous city.

Once the new constitution was adopted, legislative elections were held in 1997 to elect the city's first legislature. The newly formed Alliance between the Radical Civic Union and FREPASO won in a landslide with 56.03% of the votes, taking 37 out of 60 seats, while the Justicialist Party and Action for the Republic trailed behind and won 11 seats each.

In 1999, De la Rúa ran and won the country's presidential election, taking office on 10 December 1999. Deputy Chief of Government Enrique Olivera was then sworn in as the city's second Chief of Government. Ahead of the 2000 election, Olivera declined to run for re-election and instead the Alliance's candidate was elected in an internal primary. The winner of said primary was former prosecutor and deputy Aníbal Ibarra, of the Broad Front.

Candidates

Coalition Mayoral candidate (party)
Prior political experience
Vice mayoral candidate (party)
Prior political experience
Parties
Aníbal Ibarra (FG)
City Legislator (1997–2000)
Cecilia Felgueras (UCR)
Secretary of Social Development (1999–2000)
Domingo Cavallo (AR)
Minister of Economy (1991–1996)
Gustavo Béliz (ND)
City Legislator (1997–2000)
  • AR
  • ND
  • PD
  • PF
  • PPI
  • PJEA
Irma Roy (PAIS)
National Deputy (1987–1999)
José Castiñeira de Dios (PAIS)
  • PAIS
Patricia Walsh (MST) Herman Schiller (Ind.)
  • MST
  • PC
Antonio Cartañá (Ind.)
Ombudsman of Buenos Aires (1988–1993)
Jorge Selser (PSA)
  • PSA
  • PDLC

Results

Chief of Government

CandidateRunning matePartyVotes%
Aníbal IbarraCecilia FelguerasAlliance for Work, Justice, and Education884,88349.42
Domingo CavalloGustavo BélizEncounter for the City595,77533.28
Irma RoyJosé Castiñeira de DiosOpen Policy for Social Integrity82,4824.61
Patricia WalshHerman SchillerUnited Left61,5783.44
Antonio CartañáJorge SelserBuenos Aires for All49,8552.78
Lía MéndezOscar CeveyHumanist Ecologist Party30,8351.72
Raúl Granillo OcampoAníbal JozamiJusticialist Party30,0961.68
Pablo RieznikHugo VillamilWorkers' Unity Front25,9681.45
Susana SacchiGustavo de BiaseSocialist Workers' Party8,4470.47
Laura Enda MarroneJorge Guidobono ReyMovement for Socialism8,1980.46
Manuel Gaggero PérezMarcelo FrondiziFree Fatherland Current5,3210.30
Federico Pinto KramerJuana A. CaparrozWhite Party3,9920.22
Antonio MontenegroMiguel CalveteCitizen Action2,9510.16
Total1,790,381100.00
Valid votes1,790,38196.01
Invalid votes25,4221.36
Blank votes48,8962.62
Total votes1,864,699100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,553,36173.03
Source:

Legislature

PartyVotes%Seats
Alliance for Work, Justice, and Education652,18236.6724
Encounter for the City548,32430.8320
Open Policy for Social Integrity118,7956.684
United Left78,7464.432
Union of the Democratic Centre74,0614.162
Buenos Aires for All53,0442.982
Movement of Pensioners and Youth53,0232.982
Party of the Intermediate Generation47,4732.671
Humanist Ecologist Party39,5532.221
Justicialist Party37,2592.091
Workers' Unity Front36,4192.051
Socialist Workers' Party10,5910.600
Movement for Socialism9,5310.540
Free Fatherland Current6,1610.350
Constitutional Nationalist Party5,6620.320
White Party4,5490.260
Citizen Action3,3640.190
Total1,778,737100.0060
Valid votes1,778,73795.17
Invalid votes25,1011.34
Blank votes65,1753.49
Total votes1,869,013100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,553,36173.20
Source:

See also

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