Alberto Lleras Camargo Explained

Honorific Prefix:His Excellency
Alberto Lleras Camargo
Order:20th
Office:President of Colombia
Predecessor:Gustavo Rojas Pinilla
Successor:Guillermo León Valencia
Order2:1st
Office2:Secretary General of the Organization of American States
Successor2:Carlos Dávila
Predecessor2:Position established
Office3:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Term End3:
President3:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Predecessor3:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor3:Francisco Umaña Bernal
Office5:Minister of Government
Predecessor5:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor5:Antonio Rocha Alvira
President5:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Predecessor6:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor6:Carlos Lozano y Lozano
President6:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Predecessor7:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor7:Darío Echandía Olaya
President7:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Order8:3rd
Ambassador From8:Colombia
Country8:United States
Predecessor8:Gabriel Turbay Abunader
Successor8:Gabriel Turbay Abunader
President8:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Office9:Minister of National Education
Predecessor9:Darío Echandía Olaya
Successor9:Tulio Enrique Tascón Pérez
President9:Alfonso López Pumarejo
Birth Name:Alberto Lleras Camargo
Birth Date:3 July 1906
Birth Place:Bogotá, D.C., Colombia
Nationality:Colombian
Party:Liberal
Spouse:Bertha Puga Martínez
Alma Mater:Del Rosario University

Alberto Lleras Camargo (3 July 1906 – 4 January 1990) was President of Colombia twice (1945-1946, 1958–1962), and the 1st Secretary General of the Organization of American States (1948–1954). A journalist and liberal party politician, he also served as Minister of Government, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and as Minister of National Education in the administrations of President Alfonso López Pumarejo.[1] He briefly attended the National University of Colombia in Bogotá to study politics, but dropped out later to pursue journalism.

Lleras Camargo served as congressman of Colombia.[2] He was also a cousin of later president Carlos Lleras Restrepo. He died in 1990 after suffering a long illness.[3]

Early Political Career and First Presidency

He attended the traditional Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario. In 1929, he was elected deputy assemblyman on the Bogotá city council, his first entrance into politics. The following year he became Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Colombian Liberal Party and in 1931, he was elected to the Colombian Chamber of Representatives. That same year, he became the first Liberal to preside over the Chamber in more than forty years.

After Alfonso López Pumarejo was elected President of Colombia in 1934, Lleras Camargo was named Cabinet Secretary. In 1935, he became the Minister of Government, a position he occupied until the end of López Pumarejo’s presidential term in 1938. In 1938, he founded the newspaper El Liberal, which promoted López Pumarejo’s re-election. In 1941, he returned to and once again presided over the Chamber of Representatives. When López Pumarejo was re-elected president in 1942, he once again named Lleras Camargo the Minister of Government. Aside from a brief interruption in 1943, when Lleras Camargo became the Colombian Ambassador to the United States, he occupied that position until 1944, when intense political instability disrupted López Pumarejo’s presidency. In July 1944, after López Pumarejo stepped down, Lleras Camargo fought off a coup attempt against Darío Echandía, who had been temporarily designated as president.

In 1945, he became Minister of Foreign Relations, and in that capacity, represented Colombia at the Chapultepec Conference and the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco, which created the United Nations. But that same year, the Senate named designated him as Acting President, a position he occupied until 1946, when Conservative Mariano Ospina Pérez was elected president. At only thirty-nine years-old, he became one of the youngest Acting Presidents in Colombian history. During his short year in office, the Greater Colombian Merchant Fleet was founded and the Constitutional Reform of 1945 completed.

Founding of the Organization of American States

After leaving the presidency in 1946, Lleras Camargo founded the highly regarded news magazine Semana. Owing to the respect and prestige he had earned as Minister of Foreign Relations and President of Colombia, he was named Director of the Pan American Union in 1947. He launched a restructuring effort, which culminated in the founding the Organization of American States in 1948. Lleras Camargo served as the first General Secretary between 1948-1949 and later completed a full five-year term between 1950 and 1954. During his second term, the organization became more consolidated as a hemispheric organization, with increased continental participation.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alberto Lleras Camargo. Un estadista para la Colombia del siglo XX. Actividad cultural del Banco de la República de Colombia. 12 July 2014. 12 March 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140312045210/http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/exhibiciones/lleras/politico.htm. dead.
  2. Web site: Alberto Lleras Camargo . Así es Colombia . Presidencia de la República . 27 June 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131031090158/http://web.presidencia.gov.co/asiescolombia/presidentes/57.htm . 31 October 2013 .
  3. Web site: Alberto Lleras, Twice President In Colombia, 83. New York Times. 5 January 1990.