Hermes Binner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hermes Juan Binner (b. 5 June 1943 in Rafaela, province of Santa Fe, Argentina) is an Argentine medical doctor and a politician.
Contents |
[edit] Education and background
Binner spent his childhood and teenage years in Rafaela. There he went to primary school at St. Joseph's College, and then attended high school at Rafaela's National College, where he began his political activity through participation in the Student Center. At the time (1958) the need for public free non-religious education was being hotly debated in Argentina. During those days Binner heard about Guillermo Estévez Boero, who was to become his teacher and guide into the socialist movement.
Binner moved to Rosario to study Medicine at the Universidad Nacional de Rosario. At 18 he become affiliated with the Argentine Socialist Party and continued to exercise an intense political activity, both as a member of the Student Center and at the institutional level in the Faculty of Medicine. After the coup d'etat and the breakup of democratic rule in 1966, he participated in the movements resisting the military dictatorship, against a background of political and ideological persecution.
He graduated in 1970 and continued his militant activism as a Graduate Council Member at the University, as well as working as a union member at the Rosario Medical Association and the Physicians' College.
[edit] Political trajectory
On 23 April 1972 Binner took part in the founding of the Popular Socialist Party (Partido Socialist Popular, PSP) in Buenos Aires.
He continued exercising his profession, taking up specialties in Anesthesiology and Labor Medicine, and starting studies in the field of Public Health. On the last account he obtained the posts of Sub-Director and Director of public hospitals.
In 1989, after the economic crisis that led to the premature departure of Raúl Alfonsín from the country's presidency and the assumption of Carlos Menem, the Radical mayor of Rosario Horacio Usandizaga resigned in mid-term, forcing anticipated municipal elections to be held. The Socialist Héctor Cavallero was elected, and he appointed Binner to the office of Public Health Secretary.
After Cavallero's term, in 1993, Binner was elected concejal (member of the City Council) for the PSP. From this platform he developed a trajectory that led him to present himself as a candidate for the municipal elections of 1995.
[edit] As Mayor of Rosario
Binner was elected Mayor of Rosario in 1995 and then re-elected in 1999, ending his second four-year term in 2003. He was candidate to the governorship of the province of Santa Fe, obtaining a larger percentage of the popular vote than any of the other candidates, but the controversial voting system in place at the time (Ley de Lemas) caused the Socialist Party to lose the election to the Peronist Party.
The eight years of the Binner administration in Rosario were marked by several guidelines:
- Decentralisation and emphasis on the citizen's rule: The city was divided into several large districts, moving the bureaucratic structure from the Municipality to the peripheral barrios (neighbourhoods), and implementing mechanisms of direct democracy.
- Emphasis on the public sphere (health, education, cultural activities) and public welfare. The administration's Health Plan was acknowledged by the Pan-American Health Organization as a model for the rest of Latin America.
- Positioning of Rosario as a strategically placed metropolis with a vast area of economic and geopolitical influence. Binner was a Founding Member and Executive Secretary of Mercociudades (cities of the Mercosur), President of the Ibero-American Center for Urban Strategic Development (CIDEU), and President of the Argentine Municipalities Federation.
On 8 December 2003, months after the end of Binner's second term, the United Nations acknowledged the people and the government of Rosario as a model of democratic governance among 257 Latin American cities (see Experiencia Rosario).
Hermes Binner was succeeded in office by one of his former municipal officials, Miguel Lifschitz, who has continued and developed the policies outlined above.
[edit] Other activities
Binner is a member of the National Table of the Socialist Party and the Secretary General of the Santa Fe Federation for the same. He is also the director of the Rosario's Municipal and Provincial Studies Center, an institution for political and academic formation with professionals of diverse disciplines debating current issues and policies.
[edit] As national deputy and candidate
Binner was a candidate to the National Chamber of Deputies (i. e. the low House of the Argentine Congress) for the Civic and Social Progressive Front, a Santa Fe party coalition including the Socialist Party and the Radical Civic Union, in the parliamentary elections of 23 October 2005. He won the seat, together with other six candidates of the Progressive Front, by a 10% margin over the list of candidates led by his closest competitor, the Peronist Agustín Rossi.
As of 2007, Binner is running for governor at the upcoming provincial election, together with former Santa Fe City federal prosecutor Griselda Tessio. His main rival, the Justicialist Party, has not formally chosen a candidate, though former chancellor and national deputy Rafael Bielsa is believed to be Binner's most likely opponent. With the Ley de Lemas repealed, all surveys predict that Binner will win by a significant margin against any of the four possible Justicialist candidates (Bielsa, Rossi, Rafaela's mayor Omar Perotti, and provincial senator Roxana Latorre). [1] [2] [3]
[edit] Sources
- Official website
- Hermes Binner's CV
- Photos
- Mensajes
- Election results
- Member of the Argentine Chamber of Deputies
- Argentine Socialist Party
- Municipality of Rosario
[edit] References
- ^ NotiExpress, 27 February 2007. Según un sondeo de opinión, Binner ganaría con el 45% de los votos.
- ^ La Capital, 5 March 2007. Kirchner, Obeid, Lifschitz, Binner y Bielsa, con los mejores números.
- ^ La Capital, 5 March 2007. Ahora también Roxana Latorre quiere ser gobernadora.
Preceded by Héctor Cavallero |
Mayor of Rosario 1995-2003 |
Succeeded by Miguel Lifschitz |