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  1. The provisional president of the Senate of the Argentine Nation (Spanish: Presidente provisional del Senado de la Nación Argentina), commonly known as the provisional president, is the highest-ranking official in the Argentine Senate, the upper chamber of the National Congress of Argentina barring the presence of the titular president of the Senate, the vice president of Argentina.

  2. 100%. President before election. Bartolomé Mitre. (Acting President and Governor of Buenos Aires) Democratic Liberal. Elected President. Bartolomé Mitre. Democratic Liberal. The Argentine presidential election of 1862 was held on 4 September to choose the first president of Argentina.

  3. The Constitution of 1853 contributed to a slow democratization of the country, a trend decidedly strengthened with the issue of the Sáenz Peña Act of 1912. This act established universal, secret, and mandatory suffrage, ending a long period of electoral fraud. In 1930 the first of several military coups in the twentieth century seriously ...

  4. The Constitution of 1853 did include a clause regarding immigration: The Federal Government shall foster European immigration; and may not restrict, limit or burden with any tax whatsoever, the entry into the Argentine territory of foreigners who arrive for the purpose of tilling the soil, improving industries, and introducing and teaching arts ...

  5. t. e. Juan Bautista Alberdi (August 29, 1810 – June 19, 1884) was an Argentine political theorist and diplomat. Although he lived most of his life in exile in Montevideo, Uruguay and in Chile, he influenced the content of the Constitution of Argentina of 1853 . Based on his classical liberal and federal constitutional ideas, Alberdi at the ...

  6. About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Contribute ... Pages in category "1853 in Argentina" ... Argentine Constitution of 1853

  7. The most relevant consequences of the agreement were two. First the sanction on May 1 of the Argentine Constitution of 1853, that was placed in force in the Argentine Confederation, and who in 1854 saw Justo José de Urquiza assuming as the first elected president of the Republic, for a period of 6 years.

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