Social and Civic Agreement
The Social and Civic Agreement (Spanish: Acuerdo Cívico y Social, ACyS) was a center-left congressional alliance in Argentina, integrated by the Radical Civic Union (UCR) the Socialist Party (PS) and the Civic Coalition ARI (CC-ARI), which acted as an umbrella national electoral alliance at the last 2009 Argentine legislative elections.[4] The Civic Coalition, which was a founder member of the Social and Civic Agreement, left the alliance on 12 August 2010.[5]
| Social and Civic Agreement Acuerdo Cívico y Social | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Leader | Elisa Carrió Ernesto Sanz Rubén Giustiniani | 
| Founded | 2009 | 
| Dissolved | 2011 | 
| Headquarters | Buenos Aires | 
| Ideology | Social democracy[1] Democratic socialism Social liberalism | 
| Political position | Centre-left[2][3] | 
| Colors | Red and White | 
| Seats in the Chamber of Deputies | 46 / 257 | 
| Seats in the Senate | 14 / 72 | 
Background
    
During the 2008 conflicts between the Argentine Government and the agricultural sector, most factions of the parties that would later ally themselves into the ACyS took a strong stance against the National Government's agricultural policy. Previously, at the 2007 presidential elections, the Civic Coalition and the Socialist Party ran on a joint presidential ticket, and - since 2005 - both parties plus the Radical Civic Union make up the Progressive, Civic and Social Front alliance in Santa Fe Province that won the provincial Governorship on 2 September 2007 for socialist Hermes Binner.
2009 legislative elections
    
The ACyS was composed of the following parties in each Province:[6]
| District | Parties under ACyS umbrella | Foremost candidates | Notes | Results of the 28 June 2009 elections[7] | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
|   Buenos Aires Autonomous City | The Socialist Party went on its own in the district. | 
 | ||
|   Buenos Aires Province | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Catamarca | 
 | As the Civic and Social Front of Catamarca governs the Province since 2003. | 
 | |
|   Córdoba | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Corrientes | 
 | Under the name Encounter for Corrientes. | 
 | |
|   Chaco | 
 | Under the name Front for Everyone | 
 | |
|   Entre Ríos | 
 | Socialist Party went on its own. | 
 | |
|   Formosa | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Jujuy | 
 | 
 | ||
|   La Pampa | 
 | As Civic and Social Front of La Pampa. | 
 | |
|   Mendoza | 
 | As Federal Civic Front. | 
 | |
|   Neuquén | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Salta | 
 | 
 | ||
|   San Juan | 
 | 
 | ||
|   San Luis | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Santa Cruz | 
 | As Change for Growth. | 
 | |
|   Santa Fe | 
 | As the Progressive, Civic and  Social Front it governs the Province since 2007. | 
 | |
|   Santiago del Estero | 
 | |||
|   Tierra del Fuego | 
 | 
 | ||
|   Tucumán | 
 | 
 | 
References
    
- "Carrió buscará confluir en un espacio social demócrata para el 2009".
- "El socialismo ratifica la alianza con la UCR y la Coalición y busca a Pino".
- "El Acuerdo Cívico prefirió nacionalizar la elección".
- Ámbito Financiero, El frente de Carrió y la UCR se llamará Acuerdo Cívico y Social, 28 April 2009
- (in Spanish) Con más críticas, Carrió se aleja del Acuerdo Cívico, La Nación
- For complete candidates lists, copy and paste the entire link: http://www.urgente24.com/index.php?id=ver&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=122458&cHash=cbf2aeeec5
- Elecciones legislativas de 2009 - Resultados
