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<text id=89TT1278>
<title>
May 15, 1989: Argentina:A Test For Latin Democracy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 46
ARGENTINA
A Test for Latin Democracy
</hdr><body>
<p>Who will lead the country out of its financial mess?
</p>
<p> The candidate, sporting bushy, graying muttonchop
sideburns, navel-baring shirts and a gold cross, stumps the land
in a bubble-domed mobile home. He is known for driving sports
cars, squiring starlets and playing tennis. His oratory is
lackluster, but he compensates with charisma and charm. And
though Carlos Saul Menem may give uninspired speeches, people
listen when he delivers his trademark finish. "Follow me!" he
shouts. "For the hunger of the poor children, for the sadness
of the rich children, follow me!" By now the crowds are roaring.
"I'm not going to deceive you," he concludes. "Follow me!"
</p>
<p> Argentina may have to, if Carlos Menem, running for
President on the Peronist ticket, wins next Sunday's election.
Nearly one-quarter of Argentines are still undecided, but Menem
is leading and has a good chance to become the first elected
civilian since 1928 to succeed another full-term civilian
President. If so, he would also bring back the popular but
chaotic politics of Peronism, a controversial -- and volatile
-- blend of populism, nationalism and Roman Catholicism.
</p>
<p> The orderly transfer of power says a good deal about this
election. With more than half a dozen presidential elections in
Latin America this year, what has been a rising tide of
democracy may be reaching a crest. Loaded down with debt,
crippled economies throughout the hemisphere could swamp some
of these frail experiments. But Argentina, for one, is no longer
deciding whether to have democracy, just what kind of democracy
to have.
</p>
<p> Despite a restless military and the uncertain character of
a Peronist government, this election is about economics.
Argentina is flirting with financial disaster. Since last month
alone, the country's currency, the austral, has plummeted from
51 to 86 to the dollar. The country's foreign debt stands at $57
billion, and the annual inflation rate is 3,600%. Says Argentine
novelist Jose Pablo Feiman: "We are close to social explosion."
</p>
<p> What caused Argentina's fall? Some Argentines blame the
legacy of Juan Peron, who took power in 1946, was ousted by the
military in 1955, then returned to rule from 1973 until his
death the following year. Peronism established a "corporative
state," in which labor and business struck pacts of cooperation
under state management. From their privileged position, the
country's Peronist-controlled unions paralyzed whole sectors of
the economy at will. The result, say critics, has been a deadly
spiral of decreased competition and productivity.
</p>
<p> But others fault outgoing President Raul Alfonsin, who
cannot succeed himself, for failing to fulfill the surge of
national optimism that swept him into office in 1983, ending
nearly eight years of military rule. Applauded for his
commitment to human rights, Alfonsin promised that a stable
democracy would solve the nation's problems. It didn't, and
Argentines grew disenchanted as the economy worsened. The
military, meanwhile, has been moving back into politics. In
three uprisings since 1987, two right-wing colonels demanded
better pay and an end to what they saw as unfair political
persecution. Only a public outpouring of support for democracy
foiled the attempted coups.
</p>
<p> Argentines are now looking for a government that works.
That should favor Eduardo Angeloz, the candidate of Alfonsin's
ruling Radical party, but it also forces him to run against his
predecessor's failed economic policies. A deft administrator
and governor of prosperous Cordoba province, Angeloz espouses
a program of deregulation, privatization and increased foreign
investment.
</p>
<p> Menem has yet to articulate his own economic program beyond
the classic Peronist bromides. He promises eventual higher
wages to the workers who form the core of his support, then
promises businessmen that the economy will be put in order. He
has announced, and retracted, such plans as a moratorium on
paying Argentina's staggering foreign debt and establishing
sovereignty over the disputed Falkland Islands. But what Menem
lacks in substance, he makes up for with his flashy, macho
style. The son of Syrian immigrants, Menem has risen from
governor of the small La Rioja province to election front runner
by sheer force of personality. His emotional directness and
humility appeal to the "shirtless ones," who see the Radical
party's policies as benefiting only the elite classes.
"Alfonsin's government has been showing insensitivity to the
lower classes," observes Feiman. "Menem represents the primitive
values of Peronism."
</p>
<p> Under Argentina's electoral-college system, it is
conceivable that Menem could win the popular vote and still lose
the election. Should a majority of the college fail to settle
on a candidate, the decision will pass to Congress. Not all
Argentines are sure that the nation's institutions could
withstand such a test. Nor are they sure Argentina could weather
another bout of Peronism; Peron's first tour in the presidential
residence and his third wife Isabel's term, from 1974 to 1976,
both ended in military coups. Argentina may be facing both
tests. "Society is learning how much to trust politicians," says
pollster and political analyst Manuel Mora y Araujo. "It is a
process of very deep, important change."
</p>
</body></article>
</text>