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'''Luis Alberto Lacalle de Herrera''' ({{IPA-es|ˈlwis alˈβeɾto laˈkaʒe ðe eˈreɾa }}, known as '''Cuqui''' (born July 13, 1941) is a ] lawyer and politician who served as ] from 1990 to 1995. '''Luis Alberto Lacalle de Herrera''' ({{IPA-es|ˈlwis alˈβerto laˈkaʎe ðe eˈreɾa}}, known as '''Cuqui''' (born July 13, 1941) is a ] lawyer and politician who served as ] from 1990 to 1995.


==Background== ==Background==
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Revision as of 18:08, 3 May 2010

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Dr.Luis Alberto Lacalle
30° Constitutional President of Uruguay
In office
March 1, 1990 – March 1, 1995
Vice PresidentGonzalo Aguirre
Preceded byJulio María Sanguinetti
Succeeded byJulio María Sanguinetti
Personal details
Born (1941-07-13) July 13, 1941 (age 83)
Montevideo, Uruguay
Political partyNational Party (Uruguay)
ProfessionLawyer

Luis Alberto Lacalle de Herrera (Template:IPA-es, known as Cuqui (born July 13, 1941) is a Uruguayan lawyer and politician who served as President of Uruguay from 1990 to 1995.

Background

His mother, María Hortensia de Herrera de Lacalle, was the daughter of the Blanco political leader Luis Alberto de Herrera, after whom Lacalle was named. Luis Alberto Lacalle joined the National Party at the age of 17. In 1961 he started working as a journalist for Clarin and he graduated from the University of the Republic's law school in 1964. In 1971, he was elected deputyfor Montevideo and kept his seat until the 1973 coup through which president Juan María Bordaberry dissolved parliament.

Assassination attempt

In August 1978 Lacalle was sent three bottles of wine tainted with poison addressed to himself and two fellow National Party members (Heber and Pereyra) who had been trying to negotiate a way out of the military regime. Lacalle's wife warned him against the suspicious gift, but Heber's wife drank a glass, dying immediately. The case remains unsolved.

Vice-President of Senate

When democracy was restored in 1984 he was elected senator, and became vice-president of the Senate.

President of Uruguay

In 1989 he ran for the presidency for his faction, Herrerismo, with running-mate, Gonzalo Aguirre. In the subsequent elections in November 1989, the National Party defeated rivals Colorado Party (running with several presidential candidates: Jorge Batlle Jorge Pacheco Areco and Hugo Fernandez Faingold and Broad Front (running with presidential candidate Líber Seregni. Lacalle got the most votes within his party, defeating Carlos Julio Pereyra and Alberto Zumarán and thus was elected President of Uruguay, taking office on March 1, 1990 for a five year-term.

Presidency

Upon taking office, Lacalle sent parliament a tax reform bill which was immediately passed with the support of the Colorado Party. Sales tax were increased (from 21% to 22% income tax was increased and a few other taxes were created. During his rule, he encouraged a free market program, participated in the Brady bonds plan to alleviate foreign debt obligations, and was a co-founder of the Mercosur, along with the presidents of Paraguay, Brazil, and Argentina, which took effect in the Treaty of Asunción on 1991.

In 1992, support for his economic reforms suffered a heavy blow when one of his most significant initiatives, a plan to privatize Uruguay's state-owned companies, was rejected by referendum

In the 1994 national elections, he selected his Interior Minister, Juan Andrés Ramírez to be the presidential candidate of the Herrerismo faction. The National Party narrowly lost the elections to the Colorado Party.

Later runs for Presidential office

In 1999, he won his Party's primary elections against Juan Andrés Ramírez (who had split from the Herrerismo) and several other candidates, and was a candidate for presidency again. However, a string of accusations about corruption in his government damaged his chances. Ramírez's departure from active politics after losing the primary was the final blow, and Lacalle came in third place with 22.3% of the votes in the general elections.

Lacalle ran again for President in the 2004 elections, but the other Party leaders had gathered around a single opposing candidate, Jorge Larrañaga, who defeated him in the primaries by a 2 to 1 margin. In 2009, he ran for the presidency again, this time defeating Jorge Larrañaga in the June primaries. By winning the primary election, he became head of the governing board of the party. He lost the presidential elections to José Mujica in a run-off election in November. Lacalle is a member of the Club of Madrid and he is Member of the Board of the Public Affairs Committee of the Jerusalem Summit .

Family

Lacalle is married to María Julia Pou Brito del Pino (b. 1946); they have three children, Pilar Lacalle Pou, the deputy Luis Alberto Lacalle Pou, and Juan José Lacalle Pou.

See also

External links

Preceded byJulio María Sanguinetti President of Uruguay
1990–1995
Succeeded byJulio María Sanguinetti

References

  1. "Former guerrilla and former president headed to runoff in Uruguay".
  2. Template:Es"Jueza solicitó pericias a las botellas de vino envenenado".
  3. Template:Es"La reforma tributaria, el debate ideologico". www.larepublica.com.uy.
  4. Charles Blake. "Economic reform and democratization in Argentina and Uruguay". Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 40 (3): 1–26.
  5. [http://www.clubmadrid.org The Club of Madrid is an independent organization dedicated to strengthening democracy around the world by drawing on the unique experience and resources of its Members – 66 democratic former heads of state and government. ]
  6. Jerusalem Summit: International Advisory Board: Public Affairs Committee (Accessed: 14 October 2008)
Heads of state and government of Uruguay
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