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Carlos Lage Davila

 
Who2 Biography: Carlos Lage Davila, Political Figure / Physician

  • Born: 15 October 1951
  • Birthplace: Havana, Cuba
  • Best Known As: Vice President of Cuba

Name at birth: Carlos Lage Davila

Carlos Lage is the Vice President of the Council of State and the Secretary of the Council of Ministers for Cuba. Trained as a pediatrician, Dr. Lage has been active in communist party politics since he was a student in the 1970s. He rose steadily through the ranks of the party, and by the mid-1980s he was a member both of the Communist Party's Central Committee and of Fidel Castro's inner staff. During the 1990s Lage earned a reputation as the hard-working coordinator of economic reforms that helped bolster Cuba after the fall of the Soviet Union. He is credited with overseeing a favorable deal with Hugo Chavez for Venezuelan oil and is sometimes referred to as Cuba's "energy czar." When Castro required surgery in the summer of 2006, Dr. Lage joined Raul Castro as one of a select group of officials given provisional responsibilities while Fidel recovered. Lage is considered one of Castro's possible successors.

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Carlos Lage Dávila
Born September 15, 1951
Havana, Cuba

Carlos Lage Dávila (born October 15, 1951) is a Cuban politician. Until 2009, he was a Vice President of the Council of State of Cuba, a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Cuba, and Executive Secretary of the Council of Ministers of Cuba. Lage was described as Cuba's de facto prime minister.[1]

Lage trained as a pediatrician before entering the Cuban government. In the early 1990s Lage became an adviser to Fidel Castro, gaining a reputation as Cuba's "primary economic fixer". Lage is currently responsible for coordinating energy, trade and currency issues. Lage is also credited with Cuba's national Energy Revolution program and the collaboration with other countries in this area. In the early 1990s, during the economic era known in Cuba as the Special Period he initiated a series of economic reforms that allowed for limited land holdings and small business initiatives. More recently, Lage negotiated a guaranteed supply of subsidized oil from Venezuela, in exchange for medicines and up to 2,000 Cuban doctors and health professionals to live in Venezuela for a time and treat that country's poor. The scheme incorporates the Venezuelan Mission Barrio Adentro welfare program.

He is also known as an academic expert on U.S. history and politics. Thus he is also an advisor to the president of Cuba (until recently Fidel Castro) on this topic. An avid reader in political theory, he is known to be an expert in comparative politics and democratic studies and he is a strong advocate of the Cuban political system. Internationally he is known for having conversations with European leaders.

With the retirement of President Fidel Castro in early 2008, Lage was mentioned by experts as a possible successor to Castro if the Cuban regime decided to go with a younger leader rather than Fidel's brother, Raúl Castro.[2] On February 24, 2008, Raúl Castro was elected President;[3] Lage was unanimously re-elected to his old post as one of the Vice Presidents of the Council of State.[4]

On 2 March 2009 Raul Castro's government removed Lage from his position as Executive Secretary of the Council of Ministers as part of a substantial cabinet reshuffle.[5] Fidel Castro then criticized him (without naming him) for being influenced by the "honey of power" in a statement on 3 March, and Lage announced his resignation from all his party and state positions—membership on the Communist Party's Central Committee and Political Bureau, membership on the Council of State, and his role as a parliamentary deputy—in a letter published on 5 March. In that letter, he also accepted Castro's criticism and agreed that he had committed errors.[6]

Footnotes

  1. ^ John Harris, "What future after Fidel?", Guardian Online, August 2, 2006.
  2. ^ "Castro steps down as Cuban leader", BBC News, February 19, 2008.
  3. ^ James C. McKinley Jr., "Raúl Castro becomes Cuban president", International Herald Tribune, February 24, 2008.
  4. ^ "Results of Council of State elections", Granma.cu, February 29, 2008.
  5. ^ "Castro reshuffles his cabinet", Reuters (International Herald Tribune), 2 March 2009.
  6. ^ Will Weissert, "2 top Cuban officials resign all party, govt posts", Associated Press, 5 March 2009.

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
'
Executive Secretary of the Council of Ministers of Cuba
?-2009
Succeeded by
General Jose Amado Ricardo Guerra
Political offices
Preceded by
'
Vice President of the Council of State of Cuba
?-2009
Succeeded by
incumbent

 
 

 

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