Argentine order of precedence
The order of precedence in Argentina is a symbolic hierarchy of officials used to direct protocol. It is regulated by Presidential Decree 2072 of 10 October 1993,[1] signed by then President Carlos Menem, and former ministers Guido di Tella and Carlos Ruckauf.
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The order of succession should the presidency unexpectedly become vacant is specified by Law 25716 of 2002.
Order of precedence
Precedence is determined by the office; names of incumbents as of 2019 are listed.
- President of the Nation (Alberto Fernández)
- Vice President of the Nation (Cristina Fernández de Kirchner)
- Provisional President of the Senate (Claudia Ledesma Abdala)
- President of the Chamber of Deputies (Cecilia Moreau)
- President of the Supreme Court (Justice Horacio Rosatti)
- Living former Presidents of the Nation in order of seniority
- Isabel Perón
- Adolfo Rodríguez Saá
- Eduardo Duhalde
- Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (appears above as Vice President)
- Mauricio Macri
- Provincial Governors and the Chief of Government of Buenos Aires
- Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers (Juan Luis Manzur)
- National Cabinet Ministers
- General Secretary of the Presidency of the Nation (Julio Vitobello)
- Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces (Lt. Gen. (Air Force) Jorge Alberto Chevalier)
- Commanders of each armed force (Navy, Air Force and Army)
- Ministers of the Supreme Court
- General Prosecutor of the Nation (Alejandra Gils Carbó)
- National Prosecutor for Administrative Investigations (Sergio Rodríguez)
- Secretaries of the Presidency of the Nation
- Chief of the Casa Militar
- Vice presidents of both chambers of the National Congress
- Provincial Vice-governors
- Argentine ambassadors in office abroad
- Cardinals
- President of the Argentine Episcopal Conference (Archbishop José María Arancedo)
- Archbishop of Buenos Aires (Mario Poli)
- Presidents of each parliamentary bloc at the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies of the Nation
- National Senators and National Deputies
- Archbishops
- Vice presidents of Provincial Senates and Chambers of Deputies
- Presidents of Provincial Supreme Courts
- Major Generals of the Army
- Rear Admirals - Upper Half
- Major Generals of the Air Force
- Argentine Ambassadors based in Argentina
- President of the National Criminal Court of Appeals (Judge Juan Carlos Rodríguez Basavilbaso)
- Presidents of National and Federal Courts of Appeals
- Bishops and their equivalents in other officially recognised religions
- Secretaries at the National Congress
- Members of the National Court of Criminal Appeals
- Members of National and Federal Courts of Appeals
- Undersecretaries of State
- Undersecretary of the Treasury
- Commander of the Argentine Federal Police (Commissioner-Major Néstor Vallecca)
- Commander of the Argentine National Gendarmerie (Commandant-general Héctor Bernabé Schenone)
- Commander of the Argentine Naval Prefecture (Prefect Oscar Adolfo Arce)
- Brigade Generals of the Army
- Rear Admirals - Lower Half
- Brigade Generals of the Air Force
- Argentine Chargé d'affaires in office abroad
- Secretaries at the Supreme Court
- Federal and National Judges
- National Directors
- Rectors of National Universities
- Presidents of National Academies
- President of the Central Bank of Argentina (Miguel Ángel Pesce)
- President of the Banco de la Nación Argentina (Eduardo Hecker)
- Presidents of state-owned companies (reparticiones autárquicas)
- Deputy Rectors of National Universities
- General Directors
- Argentine Consuls in office abroad
- Argentine diplomatic Attachés in office abroad
- Director of the Argentine National Library (Juan Sasturain)
- Director of National Museums
- Deans of National Faculties
- Presidents of National Professional Associations
Order of succession
The order of succession should the presidency unexpectedly become vacant is specified by Law 25716 of 2002:[2]
- The Vice President
- The Provisional President of the Senate
- The President of the Chamber of Deputies
- The President of the Supreme Court of Justice
until Congress designates a president according to article 88 of the Constitution of Argentina.
References
- Protocolo Nacional - Decreto 2072/93 Archived 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine (National Protocol - Decree 2072/93) (in Spanish)
- Ley de acefalía del Poder Ejecutivo Document covers law 20972 as modified by law 25716. (in Spanish)
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