Everything about Revoluci N Libertadora totally explained
The
Revolución Libertadora (
Spanish,
Liberating Revolution) was a military
uprising that ended the second
presidential term of
Juan Domingo Perón in
Argentina, on
September 16,
1955.
President Perón was first elected in
1946. In
1949 a
constitutional amendment sponsored by the government introduced a number of workers'
rights and the possibility of presidential reelection. Perón was reelected in
1952. At the time his administration was widely supported by the
labor unions, the
military and the
Catholic Church.
However, economic problems, some of the government's policies and Perón's own
personalism changed this situation. The opposition criticized Perón because of his treatment of
dissidents (writers, artists, politicians and other intellectuals were harassed and sometimes were forced to exile). The Church distanced itself from Perón and by
1954 it was openly anti-Peronist, which also influenced the more religious and nationalistic factions of the military. The government, which had first granted privileges to the Church, now took them away in a distinctly confrontational fashion
(see State-Church relations in Argentina for details).
By 1955 Perón had lost the leadership of a large part of the military, who conspired with other political actors (members of the
Radical Party and the
Socialist Party, as well as conservative groups). There were several uprisings in different parts of the country. On
June 14, Catholic
bishops spoke against Perón during a
Corpus Christi procession which turned into a
demonstration.
On
June 16 Navy airplanes
bombed the Plaza de Mayo, wounding or killing several hundreds of civilians. In retaliation, extremist Peronist groups attacked and burned several churches that night.
The only important political support for Perón came from the
CGT (the main confederation of labor unions), which called the workers to defend the president. Perón addressed a workers' demonstration on
August 31.
On
September 16 a new uprising, led by General
Eduardo Lonardi, General
Pedro E. Aramburu and Admiral
Isaac Rojas, deposed Perón and established a provisional government. For several days, there was some fighting in places like
Córdoba Province (Gen. Lonardi's central command), the
Puerto Belgrano Naval Base near
Bahía Blanca, another naval base near
La Plata, and several Army garrisons in
Corrientes Province. Two rebel destroyers, blockading the
Río de la Plata, were straffed by loyalist aircraft. The city of
Mar del Plata was subjected to naval bombardment, and scattered skirmishes and air strikes took place elsewhere, including
Buenos Aires itself. There were more than 200 fatalities overall. After realizing that the country was on the brink of civil war, Perón resigned and sought
asylum in
Paraguay.
On
September 23 General Lonardi assumed the presidency and gave a speech from the balcony of the
Casa Rosada, saying that there would be "neither victors nor vanquished" (
ni vencedores ni vencidos), and promising that the
interim administration would end as soon as the country was "reorganized". His conciliatory tone earned him the opposition of hard-liners, and in November an internal coup deposed Lonardi and placed General Aramburu in the presidency.
After the
Revolución Libertadora Perón and his followers were accused of treason, and
Eva Perón's remains were moved to an undisclosed location. Public references to Perón or his late wife, including songs, writings and pictures, were forbidden. The Peronist Party suffered a proscription that was to last until Perón's return in
1973, even though Perón influenced the results of the 1958 and 1963 elections from his
exile in
Madrid.
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