Yes he is. As easy as that.
When he won the presidential elections in Bolivia 2005, he became the first president in the world who had indigenous background.
Simón Bolívar was the first President of Bolivia. The country of Bolivia was named after him by Antonio José de Sucre, leader of the military who chose to separate Upper-Peru into its own state after it was liberated from the Spanish in 1825. Bolivar was the President in 1825 from August 11 to December 29, succeeded by Antonio José de Sucre.
1337 a.D.
Jomo Kenyatta
Simon bolivar is one of many famous people in Bolivia. He was the person to declare Bolivia a republic country and he was the first president of Bolivia. Incorrect. Simon Bolivar is known as the "liberator" of Bolivia (and other South American countries) because he led some of the battles in the wars for independence from Spain, but he was Venezuelan and was never a Bolivian president. Bolivia's first president was Antonio José de Sucre after whom Bolivia's capital city (Sucre) is named.
Benito Juarez, president of Mexico.
yes
Evo Morales has declared himself the first Amerindian president, a controversial claim due to the Amerindian heritages of such prior Bolivian presidents as Andrés de Santa Cruz (1829-who claimed that through his mother he was descended from Inca rulers[15], Mariano Melgarejo (1864), Carlos Quintanilla (1939), René Barrientos (1964), Juan José Torres (1976), Luis García Meza (1980), and Celso Torrelio (1981). Presidential candidate Mario Vargas Llosa, who accuses Morales of fomenting racial divisions in an increasingly mestizo South America.
Katelyn Morales
The Spanish surname for Morales is 'mora'. This word means 'mulberry'. This surname was given to people who lived near mulberry bushes. One of the first settlers with this name was Andres Morales.
Some interesting things in Chile is thay had there first woman president in 2006. They also won Bolivia's only outlet to the sea in the war of the Pacific.
Dan Morales