2023 in Argentina
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See also: | Other events of 2023 List of years in Argentina |
Events in the year 2023 in Argentina.
Incumbents[edit]
- President: Alberto Fernández
- Vice President: Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Governors[edit]
- Governor of Buenos Aires Province: Axel Kicillof
- Governor of Catamarca Province: Raúl Jalil
- Governor of Chaco Province: Jorge Capitanich
- Governor of Chubut Province: Mariano Arcioni
- Governor of Córdoba: Juan Schiaretti
- Governor of Corrientes Province: Gustavo Valdés
- Governor of Entre Ríos Province: Gustavo Bordet
- Governor of Formosa Province: Gildo Insfrán
- Governor of Jujuy Province: Gerardo Morales
- Governor of La Pampa Province: Sergio Ziliotto
- Governor of La Rioja Province: Ricardo Quintela
- Governor of Mendoza Province: Rodolfo Suárez
- Governor of Misiones Province: Oscar Herrera Ahuad
- Governor of Neuquén Province: Omar Gutiérrez
- Governor of Río Negro Province: Arabela Carreras
- Governor of Salta Province: Gustavo Sáenz
- Governor of San Juan Province: Sergio Uñac
- Governor of San Luis Province: Alberto Rodríguez Saá
- Governor of Santa Cruz Province: Alicia Kirchner
- Governor of Santa Fe Province: Omar Perotti
- Governor of Santiago del Estero: Gerardo Zamora
- Governor of Tierra del Fuego: Gustavo Melella
- Governor of Tucumán: Juan Luis Manzur
Vice Governors[edit]
- Vice Governor of Buenos Aires Province: Verónica Magario
- Vice Governor of Catamarca Province: Rubén Dusso
- Vice Governor of Chaco Province: Analía Rach Quiroga
- Vice Governor of Corrientes Province: Gustavo Canteros
- Vice Governor of Entre Rios Province: María Laura Stratta
- Vice Governor of Formosa Province: Eber Wilson Solís
- Vice Governor of Jujuy Province: Carlos Haquim
- Vice Governor of La Pampa Province: Mariano Fernández
- Vice Governor of La Rioja Province: Florencia López
- Vice Governor of Mendoza Province: Mario Abed
- Vice Governor of Misiones Province: Carlos Omar Arce
- Vice Governor of Neuquén Province: Marcos Koopmann
- Vice Governor of Rio Negro Province: Alejandro Palmieri
- Vice Governor of Salta Province: Antonio Marocco
- Vice Governor of San Juan Province: Roberto Gattoni
- Vice Governor of San Luis Province: Eduardo Mones Ruiz
- Vice Governor of Santa Cruz: Eugenio Quiroga
- Vice Governor of Santa Fe Province: Alejandra Rodenas
- Vice Governor of Santiago del Estero: Carlos Silva Neder
- Vice Governor of Tierra del Fuego: Mónica Urquiza
Events[edit]
- Ongoing: COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina
- 6 March: Argentine president Alberto Fernández announces the deployment of hundreds of federal security forces to the city of Rosario after an increase in violence between rival drug gangs.[1]
- 22 March: Argentine mathematician Luis Caffarelli wins this year's Abel Prize "for his seminal contributions to regularity theory for nonlinear partial differential equations including free-boundary problems and the Monge–Ampère equation". He becomes the first Latin American to win this prize.[2]
- 13 August: Argentines head to the polls for the primaries before the October general election.[3]
- 22 October: Argentines vote for their new president.[4]
- 23 October: Argentina has their first round of the two-round system, leaving Sergio Massa and Javier Milei for the second round with ~36% and ~30% of the votes respectively.[5]
- 29 October: 2023 Argentine general election[6][7]
References[edit]
- ^ "Argentina boosts security forces in violence-plagued Rosario". AP NEWS. 2023-03-07. Retrieved 2023-03-08.
- ^ "The Messi of maths: Argentinian Luis Caffarelli wins Abel prize | Mathematics | The Guardian". amp.theguardian.com. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
- ^ "Argentina Polls: Country set for primary vote with ruling Peronists fighting for survival". WION. Retrieved 2023-08-13.
- ^ Misculin, Nicolás (2023-10-22). "Crisis-hit Argentina votes, with radical front-runner in spotlight". Reuters. Retrieved 2023-10-22.
- ^ Chen, Abel Alvarado,Stefano Pozzebon,Esteban Campanela,Karol Suarez,Heather (2023-10-22). "Argentina presidential election heading to run-off with Massa leading Milei". CNN. Retrieved 2023-10-23.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Argentina's opposition wins legislative polls ahead of 2023 election". www.efe.com. Retrieved 2022-02-12.
- ^ de 2021, 20 de Diciembre. "Alberto Fernández volvió a pedir una PASO para 2023: "No voy a priorizar mi interés sino el del Frente de Todos"". infobae (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2022-02-12.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)