Ricardo Alfonsín

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Ricardo Alfonsín
Ricardo Alfonsín 3 (cropped).jpg
Argentine Ambassador to Spain
Assumed office
10 December 2019
Nominated byAlberto Fernández
Preceded byRamón Puerta
National Deputy
In office
10 December 2009 – 10 December 2017
ConstituencyBuenos Aires
Provincial Deputy of Buenos Aires
In office
10 December 1999 – 10 December 2003
ConstituencyFifth Electoral Section
Personal details
Born
Ricardo Luis Alfonsín

(1951-11-02) 2 November 1951 (age 69)
Chascomús, Argentina
Political partyRadical Civic Union
Other political
affiliations
Broad Progressive Front (2011–2013)
Broad Front UNEN (2013–2015)
Cambiemos (2015–2019)
Frente de Todos (2020-)
Spouse(s)Cecilia Plorutti
MotherMaría Lorenza Barreneche
FatherRaúl Alfonsín
Alma materUniversity of Buenos Aires
ProfessionLawyer

Ricardo Luis Alfonsín (born 2 November 1951) is an Argentine lawyer, academic and politician prominent in the Radical Civic Union. His father, Raúl Alfonsín, was the President of Argentina from 1983 to 1989. Since 2019, he has been Argentina's ambassador to Spain.[1]

Early life and education[]

Ricardo Luis Alfonsín was born in Chascomús son of María Lorenza Barreneche and Raúl Alfonsín; the latter was at the time a local lawyer and councilman active in the centrist Radical Civic Union (UCR). Ricardo Alfonsín earned a degree in education at the Chascomús Teachers College, and taught civics in local secondary schools, later earning a law degree at the University of Buenos Aires.[2]

He married Cecilia Plorutti, and the couple had four children during the 1980s; though his father had been elected president in 1983, they avoided involvement in politics at the time.

Political career[]

He first actively entered politics in 1993, and was elected delegate to the UCR leadership convention, during which his father was returned to the party's presidency after being turned out in 1991. He first rose to elected office in 1999, as a Buenos Aires Provincial Deputy, and remained in the post until 2003. The UCR in tatters following the 2001 resignation of President Fernando de la Rúa, Alfonsín was named head of the party's foreign policy office following the end of his term in the legislature.[3]

On 7 September 2004, his youngest daughter, Amparo, suffered a deep cut from broken glass at the parochial school she attended in Buenos Aires, and lost her life at age 15.[4] The tragedy led Alfonsín to retire from politics for a time, though in 2007, he made a surprise bid for the office of Governor of Buenos Aires Province, naming veteran actor Luis Brandoni as his running mate. The move was unconventional because the UCR, on which ticket he ran, had endorsed independent candidate Roberto Lavagna in the 2007 presidential race, and Lavagna, in turn, backed Congressman Jorge Sarghini for governor.[2] Ultimately, none of the three won their respective races.

Alfonsín lost his father on 31 March 2009, when three days of national mourning were declared. A month earlier, he formed an alliance with former fellow UCR lawmaker Margarita Stolbizer (who had established her own party, GEN) and accepted the second spot in the GEN/UCR party list ahead of the June 28, 2009 mid-term elections. The list came in third in the Province of Buenos Aires, though it secured enough votes to elect both to the Lower House of Congress, where they would be seated on 10 December.[5] As part of a compromise with the ruling Front for Victory caucus (representing Kirchnerism), the latter would retain the Presidency of the Lower House, and Alfonsín was elected 1st Vice President of the body on 4 December.[6]

Alfonsín clinched his party's nomination for the 2011 presidential elections when Senator Ernesto Sanz withdrew on 28 April.[7] The Civic and Social Agreement alliance with GEN and the Socialist Party was broken in June, so he endorsed the Federal Peronism candidate Francisco de Narváez for Governor of Buenos Aires and appointed former Central Bank President Javier González Fraga as running mate.[8] They placed third with 11% of the vote.

References[]

  1. ^ "Ricardo Alfonsín fue designado embajador argentino en España". La Nacion (in Spanish). 4 February 2020. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Clarín (9/16/2007) (in Spanish)
  3. ^ 26 Noticias (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Clarín (9/8/2004) (in Spanish)
  5. ^ DERF (2/26/2009) (in Spanish)
  6. ^ Clarín (12/4/2009) (in Spanish)
  7. ^ "Sanz withdraws from presidential race". Buenos Aires Herald.
  8. ^ "Alfonsín picks economist Javier González Fraga as running mate". Buenos Aires Herald.

External links[]

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