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Continuismo
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Continuismo () is the practice by incumbents of keeping themselves in office beyond legal for their elected office, often a result or cause of democratic backsliding and the erosion of human rights.Roland H. Ebel. "Continuismo" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 2, p. 257. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.

(2026). 9780822959434, Univ. of Pittsburgh Press.
page 8

Some Latin American heads of state indefinitely extend their rule by way of reducing or abolishing ,Russell F. Fitzgibbon, "Continuismo: The Search for Political Longevity" in Caudillos: Dictators in Spanish America, Hugh M. Hamill, ed. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1992, p. 211. via constitutional revision. An example is Alfredo Stroessner in . Another tactic is legislative enactment, such as with , in in 1941. A third tactic is by , such as in the cases of Carlos Castillo Armas in Guatemala, Marcos Pérez Jiménez in , the 1988 failed attempt by in and in 2020 in Russia. A further type is through a , as done by Getúlio Vargas in . Yet another way is for the outgoing incumbent to hand-pick a successor that they can use as a , as when Emilio Portes Gil and Abelardo Rodríguez in allowed Plutarco Elías Calles, " el jefe máximo", to continue ruling, a period known as the .

The extension of family rule occurred in with the ; in Argentina with Juan Perón; and then more recently with Néstor Kirchner and his wife Cristina Fernández de Kirchner; and in with and his brother Raúl Castro.Ebel, "Continuismo" p. 257. Despite Peru's one-term limit established by its 1979 constitution, illegally extended his rule to ten years through two re-elections.

U.S. President often mused about serving in office beyond constitutional limits, before publicly ruling it out in September 2023.


See also


Further reading
  • "Continuismo" in Latin American Political Dictionary, edited by Ernest E. Rossi and Jack C. Plano. (1980)
  • Ebel, Roland H. "Continuismo" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 2, p. 257. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  • Fitzgibbon, Russell H. "Continuismo" in Central America and the Caribbean", Inter-American Quarterly 2 (July 1940): 56-74/
  • Alexander Baturo, Continuismo in Comparison: Avoidance, Extension, and Removal of Presidential Term Limits, in A. Baturo, R. Elgie. The Politics of Presidential Term Limits,


Works cited
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