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Alberto Lleras Camargo

 
Biography: Alberto Lleras Camargo

Twice president of Colombia, director-general of the Pan American Union, and secretary-general of the Organization of American States (OAS), Alberto Lleras Camargo (1906-1990) was a journalist and a statesman. He spent most of his life in search of peaceful solutions to the problems of Latin America and his native land.

Alberto Lleras Camargo was born to a prominent family in Bogotá, Colombia, on July 3, 1906. When Lleras was 11, his father died, leaving the family penniless. With an older brother's help, he was able to complete high school at a military academy. Lleras entered the School of Law and Political Science of the National Unviversity in Bogotá, but left before receiving a degree.

Journalist Training

After some newspaper reporting work in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Lleras returned home in 1930 to become editor of Bogotá's leading liberal newspaper, El Tiempo. His wit and terse writing style soon made him one of the country's most popular journalists.

Entering Politics

By now, Lleras had developed an interest in politics. In 1931 he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies and became its speaker in 1931 and 1933. When his longtime associate, Dr. Alfonso López, became president of Colombia in 1934, Lleras was appointed as his general secretary. The following year, he was named Minister of the Government, the youngest man, at age 29, in the country's history to hold such a post.

Lleras stayed in government until 1938 and then founded El Liberal, Bogotá's second largest newspaper. After another stint in the Chamber of Deputies, he was elected to the Senate in 1943 and was appointed ambassador to the United States.

Lleras's U.S. duty was short-lived. He was recalled after only a few months to serve once again as Minister of the Government. In 1945 he led the Colombian delegation to San Francisco for the signing of the United Nations Charter.

Quite unexpectedly, in July 1945, President López resigned, as did his two vice presidents. Lleras was chosen to fill out the term, becoming at age 39 one of the world's youngest heads of state.

When his term expired, Lleras returned to journalism and founded Semana, a news magazine. In 1947 he became director-general of the Pan American Union, the first South American in that position. The following year the union was reorganized as the Organization of American States (OAS), and Lleras was named its secretary-general.

Returning to Colombia, Lleras became president of the University of the Andes in 1954 and then resumed newspaper work. A military dictatorship had now taken over the country. Lleras became the head of the Liberal party, and in July 1956 he met the exiled Conservative Laureano Gómez in Spain to negotiate the Pact of Benidorm, which called for collaboration against dictatorship and committed both parties to an extended period of bipartisan cooperation.

On July 20, 1957, following the collapse of the dictatorship, Gómez and Lleras signed the Declaration of Sitges, creating a revised constitutional system to rule Colombia from 1958 to 1974. Among its major provisions was an equal sharing of congressional, administrative, and diplomatic positions and alternative four-year presidencies between Conservatives and Liberals for the next 16 years.

As a major architect of the National Front, which emerged from these agreements, Lleras was inaugurated as president of Colombia on Aug. 7, 1958. He guided the country toward economic recovery from the fiscal excesses of the dictatorship period. Setting a moderate course in socioeconomic policies, Lleras introduced an austerity program, drastically reduced imports, engaged in public works, and brought national planning to all areas of government. Emphasizing friendly ties with the United States, he was able to bring U.S. technical assistance to the country.

Out of office in 1962 because he could not constitutionally succeed himself, Lleras returned to journalism once more. He became chairman of the news magazine Vision.

In 1931 Lleras had married Berta Puga, daughter of a former president of Chile. The couple had three daughters and a son. Holder of many honorary degrees from universities in Latin America and the United States, including Harvard and Yale, Lleras was also an honorary colonel in the Colombian army. He lived in Bogotá until his death on Jan. 4, 1990.

Further Reading

There are no biographies of Lleras in English. The most detailed description of the National Front's evolution and the 1958 election of Lleras is John D. Martz, Colombia: A Contemporary Political Survey (1962). A more recent survey of Colombian politics, which includes an assessment of Lleras's 1958-1962 administration, is Robert H. Dix, Colombia: The Political Dimensions of Change (1967).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Alberto Lleras Camargo
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Lleras Camargo, Alberto (älbār'tō lyā'räs kämär'), 1906-90, president of Colombia (1945-46, 1958-62). A journalist, he entered politics as a Liberal, occupying many important government posts in the 1930s and 1940s. After his first short stint as president (1945-46), he served as director of the Pan-American Union (1947-48) and as first secretary-general of the Organization of American States (1948-54). He was instrumental in unseating the dictator Gustavo Rojas Pinilla (1957) and was the chief architect of the constitutional amendment (approved Dec., 1957) that provided for bipartisan Liberal-Conservative rule for a period of 12 years (later extended to 16 years). This plan, almost unique in the politics of the hemisphere, ended 10 years of bloody political strife that had cost approximately 200,000 lives. It also enabled Lleras, as president (1958-62), to stabilize the economy.
Wikipedia: Alberto Lleras Camargo
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Alberto Lleras Camargo

Oil painting by Ricardo Gomez Campuzano


In office
August 7, 1958 – August 7, 1962
Preceded by Colombian Military Junta
Gabriel París Gordillo
Succeeded by Guillermo León Valencia

In office
April 30, 1948 – August 1, 1954
Preceded by Office created
Succeeded by Carlos Dávila

In office
August 7, 1945 – August 7, 1946
Preceded by Alfonso Lopez Pumarejo
Succeeded by Mariano Ospina Perez

In office
February 12, 1945 – August 2, 1945
President Alfonso López Pumarejo
Preceded by Darío Echandía
Succeeded by Francisco Umaña Bernal

In office
October 8, 1943 – February 12, 1945
President Alfonso López Pumarejo (1943, 1944-1945)
Darío Echandía (1943-1944)
Preceded by Darío Echandía
Succeeded by Antonio Rocha
In office
February 27, 1937 – August 7, 1938
President Alfonso López Pumarejo
Preceded by Darío Echandía
Succeeded by Carlos Lozano y Lozano
In office
October 10, 1935 – January 12, 1937
President Alfonso López Pumarejo
Preceded by Darío Echandía
Succeeded by Darío Echandía

In office
April 1943 – October 1943
President Alfonso López Pumarejo

In office
January 28, 1937 – February 27, 1937
President Alfonso López Pumarejo
Preceded by Darío Echandía
Succeeded by Tulio Enrique Tascón Pérez

Born July 3, 1906(1906-07-03)
Bogotá, Cundinamarca, Colombia
Died January 4, 1990 (aged 83)
Bogotá, DC, Colombia
Nationality Colombian
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Berta Puga Martínez
Relations Arturo Puga (father-in-law)
Children Alberto Lleras Puga
Ximena Lleras Puga
Marcela Lleras Puga
Consuelo Lleras Puga
Alma mater Our Lady of the Rosary University
Occupation Journalist, diplomat, politician
Religion Roman Catholic

Alberto Lleras Camargo (1906 – 1990) was an important Colombian diplomat and political figure.

He was a member of the Liberal Party of Colombia; he served as congressman (1931-1935), Minister of Education, Minister of the Interior and Minister of Foreign Affairs, during the governments of Alfonso López Pumarejo and Eduardo Santos. He served too as acting President of Colombia between 1945 and 1946. He then served as the first secretary general of the Organization of American States from 1948 to 1954. Finally, he served as President of Colombia between 1958 and 1962. During this later term, he founded the Colombian Institute for Agrarian Reform (INCORA), with the intention of implementing a needed degree of land reform in the country.


In 1929 he was elected Alderman for Bogota, which marked his first foray into politics. The following year he was secretary of the general direction of liberalism, and in 1931 was elected to the House of Representatives for Bogota. That same year he became the first liberal to come to preside over the House in more than forty years. After the election of Alfonso López Pumarejo as president in 1934, was appointed by him as Secretary General of the Presidency. In 1935 he moved to the Ministry of Government, a position he held until the end of government. In 1938 he founded the newspaper El Liberal, which led to Lopez's reelection in 1941 and returned to the House of Representatives, presided over. With Lopez's return to the presidency in 1942, he held the portfolio of government again. In 1943 he went as Ambassador to the United States, but the same year he returned and resumed the ministry of government. As such he had to face the quasi-coup in July 1944 by the Designated Dario Echandia, who assumed the presidency. In 1945 he was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs, and as such, represented Colombia at the Conference of Chapultepec, and the San Francisco Conference which created the UN, elected that year by the Senate as a presidential candidate, it should have the presidency after the resignation of Lopez, a position he held until the following year, when elections were held which gave victory to conservative candidate Mariano Ospina Pérez. At 39 years he was the youngest incumbent president in history with General Eustorgio Salgar. During his government he founded the Flota Mercante and concluded the constitutional reform of 1945.

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