Aníbal Fernández should not be confused with Aníbal Fernandes.
Aníbal Fernández | |
Office: | Minister of Security |
Term Start: | 20 September 2021 |
Term End: | 10 December 2023 |
President: | Alberto Fernández |
Predecessor: | Sabina Frederic |
Successor: | Patricia Bullrich |
Office1: | Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers |
Term Start1: | 26 February 2015 |
Term End1: | 10 December 2015 |
President1: | Cristina Fernández de Kirchner |
Predecessor1: | Jorge Capitanich |
Successor1: | Marcos Peña |
Term Start2: | 8 July 2009 |
Term End2: | 10 December 2011 |
President2: | Cristina Fernández de Kirchner |
Predecessor2: | Sergio Massa |
Successor2: | Juan Manuel Abal Medina |
Office3: | General Secretary of the Presidency |
Term Start3: | 16 December 2014 |
Term End3: | 26 February 2015 |
President3: | Cristina Fernández de Kirchner |
Predecessor3: | Oscar Parrilli |
Successor3: | Eduardo de Pedro |
Term Start4: | 2 January 2002 |
Term End4: | 3 October 2002 |
President4: | Eduardo Duhalde |
Predecessor4: | Luis Lusquiños |
Successor4: | José Pampuro |
Term Start5: | 10 December 2011 |
Term End5: | 16 December 2014 |
Predecessor5: | Eric Calcagno |
Successor5: | Juan Manuel Abal Medina Jr. |
Constituency5: | Buenos Aires |
Office6: | Minister of Justice, Security and Human Rights |
President6: | Cristina Fernández de Kirchner |
Term Start6: | 10 December 2007 |
Term End6: | 8 July 2009 |
Predecessor6: | Alberto Iribarne |
Successor6: | Julio Alak |
Office7: | Minister of the Interior |
President7: | Néstor Kirchner |
Term Start7: | 25 May 2003 |
Term End7: | 10 December 2007 |
Predecessor7: | Jorge Matzkin |
Successor7: | Florencio Randazzo |
Office8: | Minister of Production |
President8: | Eduardo Duhalde |
Term Start8: | 3 October 2002 |
Term End8: | 25 May 2003 |
Predecessor8: | José Ignacio de Mendiguren |
Successor8: | Débora Giorgi |
Office9: | Mayor of Quilmes |
Term Start9: | 1991 |
Term End9: | 1995 |
Predecessor9: | Eduardo Camaño |
Successor9: | Federico Scabarino |
Birth Date: | 9 January 1957 |
Birth Place: | Quilmes, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina |
Party: | Justicialist Party |
Alma Mater: | National University of Lomas de Zamora |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Signature: | Firma Anibal Fernández.png |
Aníbal Domingo Fernández (born January 9, 1957) is an Argentine Justicialist Party politician, lawyer, and certified public accountant. Throughout his career, he has remained a close ally to the former Presidents Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. Between 2021 and 2023, he served as Argentina's Minister of Security in the cabinet of President Alberto Fernández.
He has held several cabinet positions under three presidents, serving in these offices for a total of over nine years. He served as Minister of Production under Eduardo Duhalde, as Interior Minister under Néstor Kirchner, as Minister of Justice under Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, and as the President's Cabinet Chief from 2009 to 2011. Most recently, he served as interventor of the state-owned mining company Yacimiento Carbonífero Río Turbio.[1] He is also the President of the Confederación Argentina de Hockey de Césped y Pista, having been elected unanimously for a second term.[2]
Born in Quilmes, Buenos Aires Province, Fernández received his CPA on 6 March 1982 from the Universidad Nacional de Lomas de Zamora and his law degree on 19 December 2001 from the same institution.
Peronist from an early age, he entered public service, working for the City of Quilmes and City of Florencio Varela from 1983 as an advisor to the Budget Committee of the Senate of the province of Buenos Aires. He worked from 1985 to 1991 in an administrative capacity for the Peronist caucus in the Senate of the Province of Buenos Aires. Between 1985 and 1987, he was administrative secretary of the Peronist Movement Caucus of the Senate, and worked in the administrative secretariat between 1987 and 1991. He advised the City Council of Quilmes, between 1983 and 1989, and Florencio Varela, between 1983 and 1988.
In 1991, Fernández was elected Mayor of Quilmes.
He was elected to the Constitutional Convention of the province of Buenos Aires in 1994 and served as chairman of the Committee on the Electoral System of the Constitutional Convention. He wrote the Eighth Section of the Reformed Constitution of the Province of Buenos Aires.
In 1995 he became a provincial senator and chaired the Public Health committee. He won the award for best senator in 1996. In June 1997 he was appointed to assist the province's Minister of Government and Justice, Dr. José María Díaz Bancalari. In 1999, he was elected president of the party in Quilmes. In December 1999, Governor Carlos Ruckauf named him Secretary of Labour, promoting him to be the province's first Minister of Labour in 2001.
In January 2002, then-President of Argentina Eduardo Duhalde appointed Fernández as General Secretary of the Presidency in the national cabinet, and named him Minister of Production in October 2002. In 2003 he was elected to the National Congress, but resigned when Kirchner appointed him Interior Minister later that year.
Following the infant malnutrition scandal in Tucumán in November 2002, Fernández famously stated that this was caused by "a sick society and a ruling class that are sons of bitches, all of them."[3]
He was believed to be planning to run for Governor of Buenos Aires Province in the 2007 elections, but his party (Front for Victory) chose Daniel Scioli instead. Newly elected President Cristina Kirchner appointed him to her cabinet as Minister of Justice, Security and Human Rights following her inauguration in December 2007. La Nación, in an editorial entitled “Justice: A Bad Start,” opined that the selection of Fernández as Minister of Justice “cannot enthuse those who hope for progress” in Argentinian justice.
Following the ruling Front for Victory's defeat in the June 28, 2009, mid-term elections, Fernández was tapped to replace Cabinet Chief Sergio Massa, who tendered his resignation to the President, effective July 7.[4] Fernández held this position from July 8, 2009, until December 10, 2011.[5] [6]
In national elections on October 23, 2011, he was elected National Senator for the Province of Buenos Aires by 4,600,000 votes.
He left the Cabinet on December 10, 2011, on the same day began representing the province of Buenos Aires in the national senate.In January 2014, Fernández said that he might be interested in succeeding Cristina Fernández de Kirchner as president of Argentina. He praised the president, describing her as “absolutely attuned to the national situation.”[7] He run for governor of the Buenos Aires Province instead, defeating Julián Domínguez in the primary elections. He lost the main elections to María Eugenia Vidal, of Republican Proposal, and announced that he may leave politics.[8]
In 2021, he was appointed as Minister of Security in replacement of Sabina Frederic, as part of a cabinet reshuffle following the government's poor showings in the 2021 legislative primary elections.[9]
In 2006, Anibal Fernández, who was serving as the Interior Minister at the time, referred to a paper by the San Andrés University later on published by the newspaper La Nación[10] of growing insecurity in Argentina as a "sensation".[11]
In December 2008, after Fernández blamed acts of railroad vandalism on the Partido Obrero, he was sued by the Partido Obrero for "slander, libel, moral damage and impact on the party's image."[12]
Fernández called Buenos Aires Education Secretary Abel Posse an “ass” and a “misogynist” in December 2009.[13]
Fernández called TV host Mirtha Legrand "uneducated, rude, ignorant” in January 2010, and maintained that she “says stupid things.”[14]
In January 2010, Fernández called economist Martín Redrado a “fool” and "freak” who “thinks he is the center of the world and fails to show respect for Argentinians.”[15]
Fernández attacked Nobel Prize-winning Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa and Spanish philosopher Fernando Savater in April 2011 for criticizing the policies of the Kirchner government. “They say stupid things,” he charged, just prior to the two writers’ appearances at a book fair. Vargas Llosa, Fernández complained, “insults President Cristina Kirchner every time he gets a chance,” and Savater “comes to Argentina to speak ill of the ruling party in Argentina.”[16]
Fernández's notable activities and associations include the following:
In May 2011 the Editorial Planeta published his first book, Zonceras argentinas y otras yerbas (Argentine follies and other stuff). The book is an attack on “the follies that do so much damage to the country” and to the Kirchner government.[17]
The book's title is a reference to the 1968 book by Argentinian writer Arturo Jauretche, Manual de zonceras argentinas, a catalogue of foolish ideas about Argentina that are widely held by the Argentinian people, having been inculcated in them by primary school and reaffirmed by the new media.
The foreword was written by the President of Argentina, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. The book was officially launched at the Frankfurt Book Fair on May 5, 2011, in front of a packed auditorium of government officials and most of the members of the Cabinet. In his presentation of the book, Fernández praised the president said that many books he had read were “full of false accusations” against the Kirchners. He singled out Mario Vargas Llosa for special criticism.[17]
In January 2012, his book Zonceras Argentinas al Sol was published. He described it as a response to “organized absurdity,” by which, he explained, he meant the opposition to the Kirchners.[18] At the official book presentation, mayor Dario Díaz Pérez Fernández said that the book would be “an invaluable tool for all youth who daily join the militancy for the project led by President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.”[19]
Fernández is divorced with one son and a daughter and is a passionate fan of Quilmes Atlético football club. He is the president of the Jauretche Institute, named for the local 20th-century pro-development activist Arturo Jauretche.
|-|-|-|-|-