Tendencia Revolucionaria
Tendencia Revolucionaria (lit. Revolutionary Tendency) was a group of left-wing Peronist organizations. Tendencia Revolucionaria formalized as an organization in the early 1970s prior to the March 1973 elections. Its objective was to bring Juan Perón back to Argentina and making Argentina socialist.[1] Tendencia Revolucionaria was made up by:[1]
- Montonero organizations
- Juventud Peronista Regionales
- Movimiento Villero Peronista
- Juventud Universitaria Peronista
- Juventud de Trabajadores Peronistas
- Unión de Estudiantes Secundarios
- Movimiento de Inquilinos Peronistas
- Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias
The organization included minority factions from:[1]
- Fuerzas Armadas Peronistas
- Peronismo de Base
Perón used Chilean President Salvador Allende as a warning example for Tendencia Revolucionaria. In September just a few days before the 1973 Chilean coup d'etat he addressed the organization:
If you want to do as Allende, then look how it goes for Allende. One has to be calm.[2]
— Juan Perón
The campaign of Tendencia Revolucionaria is credited for the election of Oscar Bidegain as Governor of Buenos Aires Province in 1973. Bidegain reciprocated by proclaiming amnesty for some incarcerated members of Tendencia Revolucionaria, a move Bidegain's Peronist ally Héctor Cámpora also promised as part of his presidential campaign. However Bidegain's running mate and subsequent vicegovernor Victorio Calabró was disliked by Tendencia Revolucionaria. He was seen as a right-wing bureaucratic syndicalist. One of the first setbacks of Tendencia Revolucionaria was Peróns sacking of Rodolfo Galimberti in April 1973 after the latters call to form militias.[1] As Perón arrived to Argentina in June 1973 Tendencia Revolucionaria suffered a major rift as some considered that any armed struggle was no longer needed while others insisted on its necessity. Another seback came on January 20, 1974 when People's Revolutionary Army attacked the Azul garrison. This resulted in Perón criticizing Bidegain who resigned after facing pressure from the Camber of Deputies. To the dismay of Tendencia Revolucionaria Victorio Calabró succeeded him as governor.[1] After the death of Perón in 1974 Tendencia Revolucionaria lost influence and suffered a series of internal rifts.[1]
References
- Pozzoni, Mariana (2009). "La Tendencia Revolucionaria del peronismo en la apertura política. Provincia de Buenos Aires, 1971-1974". Estudios Sociales (in Spanish). 36: 173–202. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
- Ortega, José (2014). "Perón y Chile" (PDF). Encucijada Americana.