La Nueva República at
El Liberal, upon his appointment as ambassador to Argentina. Back to Argentina in 1927, the Irazusta brothers founded the () newspaper, of which renowned figures of right-wing
Argentine nationalism such as
Ernesto Palacio, Tomás Darío Casares or Juan Emiliano Carulla himself would become frequent writers. Staunchly anti-liberal, the publication served as a means for Argentine far-right intellectuals to come into contact with Spanish Catholic intellectual and diplomat
Ramiro de Maeztu, who was staying in the country during his term as ambassador at Buenos Aires of the
dictatorship of Primo de Rivera.
La Nueva República finished its activities in 1931, after president
Hipólito Yrigoyen was overthrown by a
military coup d'état. Ramiro de Maeztu named Maurras among his intellectual precursors, along with other integral nationalist figures such as
António Sardinha or Henri Massis, and Catholic thinkers such as
G. K. Chesterton and
Hilaire Belloc. After joining the
Patriotic Union in 1927, the only party of the Spanish dictatorship, he was quickly assigned to the embassy in Argentina, what has been pointed out as a possible strategical maneuver by
Primo de Rivera in order to remove him from the country considering his extremely reactionary points of view. Catholic integralist magazine
Criterio welcomed his arrival as "the best gift that the Motherland has given us for a long time", while left-leaning media such as
El Día or
Nosotros criticized his designation.
La Nueva República expressed great enthusiasm at his arrival, stating the dictatorship "could not have chosen better" a figure to foster relations between Spain and Hispanic America. Unlike virtually all Argentine
maurrassistes, Maeztu would develop favourable views towards Hipólito Yrigoyen, with whom he held a cordial relationship. The Spanish author admired the president's political style, comparing it to that of Juan Manuel de Rosas. Neo-republicans would regularly share meetings with Maeztu at the Spanish embassy, through which the Spanish author asserted a great influence over the young men's thought. The nationalist newspaper would be the first of most Argentine right-wing political groups to embrace the Basque thinker's ideas. Despite Maeztu did not adhere to strictly maurrasian nationalism but to a
National Catholic view of such concept, in which religion functioned as a prevalent unifying force, his ideological positions were quickly incorporated to Argentine maurrasian thought. Julio Irazusta compared his panhispanist views to the "counter-revolutionary programme" of
Enquête sur la monarchie, one of the most renowned works by Maurras. The prevalence of Maeztu's
religious nationalism over Maurras'
ethnonationalism was a central aspect of neo-republicanism, as expressed by Irazusta in 1931:For the Latin, and therefore Spanish, criterion, racial affinity does not derive only from blood. The races that form Latinity are nothing but the superposition of new ethnic layers that have come to build their identity through a bond much stronger than that of blood transfusion: through spiritual unity. [
If for the Spaniards] race did not exist in blood but in baptism [
and] what unites the Spaniards and the Americans more than blood and language is religion, [
the consequence is that] those who commit themselves to destroying the religious sentiment of our people, mixed with all the patriotic feelings, they undertake to destroy the strongest and most noble bond that unites our society.Neo-republicans would subsequently reject accusations of fascism. As Federico Ibarguren stated in 1969we, young revolutionaries (anti-liberal, but with autonomous bases) of the 1930 generation of 'fascist' had very little, very little. We were, on the other hand, '
Lugonian' to the bone in those distant times of
La Nueva República. Being 'Lugonian' is different from being a 'fascist'. Evidently. Fascism as a theory was generated in a laboratory of intellectuals with the socialist spermtotalitarian and secularof the twentieth century; instead Argentine nationalism feeds on the ancient Hispanic cult of the personality, where the Catholic tradition sprouts like a well watered seed under the earth.The great influence asserted by Catholic traditionalism over the movement led to its description as a "tempered
maurrassisme". Still, the local archbishop
Santiago Copello would describe
La Nueva República as the "Argentine
Action Française".,
editor-in-chief of
La Nueva República (1900–1979) Ernesto Palacio, the editor-in-chief of
La Nueva República, would become one of the main exponents of maurrasian thought in the country. After a youth of militant
anarchism, Palacio converted to Roman Catholicism and became an enthusiast of
counter-revolutionary philosophy. An attendant to the 1972 event organized by Irazusta, Palacio elaborated his own nationalist political theory based on classicism and authoritarianism. His views were deeply critical of
liberal democracy, particularly against those he called "demagogic excesses" of
Argentine radicalism. Palacio attacked the politicians of his time as motivated by "a systematic denigration of what is ours, of the national, for the benefit of what is foreign". The author, considering Argentine society to be deeply
deviant, subsequently attempted a meticulous study of history in order to find the country's "origin and destiny" which would lead to the formulation of his restorationist program. Palacio blamed the national
decadence on the liberal notion of
progress, which had supposedly abolished the "religious strength and chivalric idealism" present in
traditional societies, and attacked the
independentist revolution as having dissolved traditional social coexistence in order to install an egalitarian and secular state in which capitalism, characterized as "the
Golden Calf", could thrive. Identically to French
maurrassistes,
La Nueva República blamed the implementation of democracy and capitalism on an alliance between protestans, freemasons and Jews. The addition of foreigners to this triad composes the maurrassian doctrine of the . Palacio considered decadence to be fostered by the destruction of the old aristocracy and its replacement by the bourgeoisie, naturally unfit for authority and command due to its obsession with wealth. Individualism and economic liberalism, incarnated in the values of Romanticism and of the French Revolution, were portrayed as central factors of the moral crisis and as harmful to hierarchy, the natural order and the Catholic Church. After decades of "cultural barbarism" caused by the abandonment of the Latin and Christian civilization and the promotion of a vulgar and disordered worldview, the "spiritual counter-revolution" was to be carried out by an aristocratic nationalist elite with enough
political will to search for the common good. Palacio's model state would be based on a "natural political order, preexistent to any
political contract" and composed of a
personalista leader and an aristocratic ruling class which would govern the country authoritatively while upkeeping "republican virtues and morals".The specific function of the ruling class is to govern, that of the people is to comply. This implies a certain moral identification of the people with the ruling class...when the ruling class ceases to represent the community because it closes itself to its desires, because it does not renew itself at the pace of social progress, of natural changes in ideas and customs, because it rejects new values, and endangers the common destiny, the community stops recognizing itself in it and in its principles, that no longer mean anything, and seeks to express itself through other means. , archetype of the Argentine
caudillo, on the cover of
Political life of Juan Manuel de Rosas by Julio Irazusta (1953) Palacio considered that an actually "democratic" leadership could not be achieved but through a
caudillo who, as an authentic "representative of the people", would "inspire confidence, respect and love". Political order would not be based on legalistic principles, but would emerge naturally out of a naturally ordered society. The ruling class was to be an educated political class, not an economic one, and would represent the community through its identification with traditional values, culture and customs, and by "responding to the predominant moral and intellectual influxes in the community". Palacio did not view Argentine nationalism as a modern ideology but as a restoration of the classical canons of the Catholic
Hispanic political tradition that had been betrayed in favor of "anglo-saxon liberalism". The revitalization of a system based on the common good, on "order, authority and hierarchy" and on elitism would restore traditional principles that liberal democracy had abandoned in order to establish industrial capitalism. Palacio praised
Joseph de Maistre's analysis of the French Revolution and supported an integralist conception of lawmaking, stating that "men cannot dictate their own laws because their autonomous conscience threatens the Christian order". Calling democracy the "material ruin and spiritual death" of the country, Palacio asked all Catholics to "search the advent of the
temporal kingship of Christ" He would deny his maurrasian beliefs during its period of condemnation by the Catholic Church, stating that "as Catholics, we could not adhere and did not adhere to a figure whose doctrine was condemned by the infallible head of the Church", and return to the movement once the ban was lifted.
La Fronda La Fronda () was a conservative newspaper led by Francisco Uriburu, an anti-
Yrigoyenist politician who had supported the
Anti-Personalist Radical Civic Union and strived to create a "republican system" free "of the distortions" introduced by Yrigoyen. After the defeat of anti-personalism in the
1928 Argentine general election and the comeback to power of Hipólito Yrigoyen, Uriburu decided to adopt a considerably more belligerent and combative style, and decided to grant space in his newspaper to other young anti-Yrigoyenist journalists. These new collaborators were recruited from maurrasian
La Nueva República and Catholic integralist
Criterio, some of which had already came into contact with the publication after
Justo Pallarés Acebal became its editor-in-chief in 1926. Neo-republicans Rodolfo Irazusta, Ernesto Palacio, Juan Carulla and Lisardo Zía were part of the former group, while other
maurrassistes such as
Roberto de Laferrère had already been collaborating with Uriburu for a long time. Despite Uriburu's political views differed greatly from those of his new partners, his staunch hatred for Yrigoyenism compelled him to allow the radicalization of his newspaper. After 1929, due to his prolonged absence during his long trips to Europe, the young
maurrassistes took over
La Fronda's editorial direction and turned it into an explicitly anti-democratic and maurrasian publication, which would have a great influence in the country's future events. == 1930 coup d'état ==