1829 Chilean presidential election
The Chilean presidential election of 1829 took place on May 15 and 16, 1829, through a system of electors.
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Chile |
---|
Comptroller General |
Constitutional Court |
Chile portal |
Description
The newly enacted Constitution of 1828 provided that the President was to be chosen by electors. Two hundred and sixteen electors, three for each congressman, were to be chosen. Each elector voted for two names, without specifying which vote was for President or Vice President.
The election was subject to abuses, so electors gave their vote to Francisco Antonio Pinto and to Joaquín Vicuña.
Even though Pinto was accepted as President, his resignation and replacement by Vice President Joaquín Vicuña triggered the Chilean Civil War of 1829.
Results
Candidates | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
Francisco Antonio Pinto | 118 | 29.06% |
Francisco Ruiz-Tagle | 98 | 24.13% |
José Joaquín Prieto | 61 | 15.02% |
Joaquín Vicuña | 48 | 11.82% |
José Gregorio Argomedo | 33 | 8.12% |
Juan de Dios Rivera | 11 | 2.7% |
José Miguel Infante | 8 | 1.97% |
Diego José Benavente | 7 | 1.72% |
José Maria Solar | 6 | 1.47% |
Dispersed | 16 | 3.94% |
Totals | 406 | 100% |
Source: Resumen de la Historia de Chile (Encina-Castedo)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.