Argentine Revolution of 1893: Difference between revisions

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When the triumph of the revolution and held, their leaders commit blunders that led to defeat. First, Aristóbulo del Valle, the strongman of the government then refused to give a coup and ousted the president Sáenz Peña, as he claimed Leandro Alem and the bulk of the radical leaders, but had support Yrigoyen who also opposed taking the national power through a coup. Del Valle refused to violate the Constitution and prepared a legal plan, which interfered major provinces and guaranteed free elections. The Senate approved the interventions, but the Chamber of Deputies, and thus defeated the plan of Aristobulo del Valle.
 
The second blunder came when Hipolito Yrigoyen freed [[Carlos Pellegrini]], one of the key leaders of the [[National AutonomousAutonomist Party|autonomismo]] official, who had been arrested in [[Haedo, Buenos Aires Province|Haedo]] by the revolutionaries. Once released, Pellegrini went to the capital and the ruling forces reorganized.
 
Finally, the third blunder occurred when, inexplicably, Aristóbulo del Valle decided to leave the [[Government House]] and go to where he was camped Temperley radical revolutionary army to be present at the time of delivery of the arms. But on August 11 with Aristóbulo del Valle absent from the government house, [[Carlos Pellegrini|Pellegrini]] and [[Julio A. Roca|Roca]] astututamente advantage intervention projects that this was sent to Congress, to push through the intervention of the provinces of Buenos Aires, San Luis and Santa Fe, now held by revolutionary governments .