The Union of the Argentine People was an Argentine Right-wing political party founded on 2 January 1962 by Pedro Eugenio Aramburu, aiming to establish an antiperonist rightist and a political party which is controlled by the Armed Forces, that could count on the massive support of the middle class and thus be able to successfully. Pedro Eugenio Aramburu himself, who in 1964 specified the objective of Udelpa by stating that "this is an anti-Peronist party." alternative. Initially before the party was founded, the Aramburu dictatorship had attempted to organize the Radical Civic Union as an anti-Peronist right-wing party, but the existence of a large sector within it, led by Arturo Frondizi, in favor of an alliance with Peronism, caused the project to fail. Udelpa adopted the slogan "Vote UDELPA y no venir" (Vote for UDELPA and he won't come back), referring to Perón (whose mention was prohibited by the laws passed by the dictatorship that called itself the Revolución Libertadora). Aramburu had oscillated between an openly anti-Peronist strategy, or fragmenting Peronism by trying to unite anti-Peronists with "Peronists without Perón" (Neo-Peronism).[9] Led by him and in a coalition with the Democratic Progressive Party, it could reach the third place in 1963 Presidential election, getting 17.81% of the votes. The party was dissolved by the 1966 Coup, which declared the abolition of all political parties. Though the party had a rebirth in 1972, the assassination of Aramburu and the lack of a strong leadership forced them to merge in a coalition with the Popular Federalist Alliance, led by ex-Navy Captain Francisco Manrique.