José Pampuro Explained

José Pampuro
Image Name:José Pampuro 2.jpg
Office:Provisional President of the Senate
Term Start:22 February 2006
Term End:30 November 2011
Preceded:Marcelo Guinle
Succeeded:Beatriz Rojkés de Alperovich
Office2:National Senator
Constituency2:Buenos Aires
Term Start2:10 December 2005
Term End2:10 December 2011
Office3:Minister of Defense
President3:Néstor Kirchner
Term Start3:25 May 2003
Term End3:28 November 2005
Preceded3:Horacio Jaunarena
Succeeded3:Nilda Garré
Office4:General Secretary of the Presidency
President4:Eduardo Duhalde
Term Start4:3 October 2002
Term End4:25 May 2003
Preceded4:Aníbal Fernández
Succeeded4:Oscar Parrilli
Birth Date:28 December 1949
Birth Place:Buenos Aires, Argentina
Party:Justicialist Party
Alma Mater:University of Buenos Aires
Profession:Physician

José Juan Bautista Pampuro (28 December 1949 – 21 January 2021) was an Argentine politician of the Justicialist Party. He served as Defense Minister under President Kirchner and also as senator for Buenos Aires Province. From 2006 to 2011 he was the Provisional President of the Senate.

Political career

Pampuro entered public service in 1983, when he was named Public Health Secretary to the Mayor of Lanús, Manuel Quindimil. He was elected to the Lower House of Congress on the populist Justicialist Party ticket in 1987, and was named Minister of Health and Social Policy for Buenos Aires Province by newly elected Governor Eduardo Duhalde in 1991.[1]

He was named director of the Buenos Aires Provincial Office (each Argentine province maintains one in the nation's capital) in 1993, and remained in the post until being returned by voters to Congress in 1999. Eduardo Duhalde, appointed President of Argentina by Congress during a crisis in 2002, named Pampuro General Secretary of the Presidency, and on 25 May 2003, he was retained in government by President Néstor Kirchner, who named Pampuro his first Defense Minister.[1]

Pampuro was elected to the Senate on the Front for Victory slate alongside Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in the 2005 mid-term elections, in which the center-left Front for Victory did well. He was elected Provisional President of the Senate on 22 February 2006, putting him second in line to the presidency,[2] and twice as President of the Mercosur Parliament (during the first half of 2008 and the first half of 2010).[3]

Pampuro retired from the Senate in 2011 with the distinction of being the first man in Argentina to twice be succeeded by women who were first to hold their respective posts: as Defense Minister by Nilda Garré,[4] and as Provisional President of the Senate by Beatriz Rojkés de Alperovich.[5]

Personal life

Pampuro was born in Buenos Aires in 1949. He enrolled at the University of Buenos Aires and earned a Medical Degree.

Pampuro died of cancer on 21 January 2021 at a hospital in Buenos Aires, aged 71.[6]

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: José Pampuro. Senado de la Nación. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110531191043/http://www.senado.gov.ar/web/senadores/biografia.php?id_sena=368. 31 May 2011.
  2. Web site: El ex ministro Pampuro fue designado número dos del Senado. Clarín.
  3. Web site: José Pampuro asumió como presidente del parlamento. Somos Mercosur. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120426050200/http://www.somosmercosur.net/boletin/jose-pampuro-asumio-como-presidente-del-parlamento-y-se-comprometio-a-trabajar-con-fuerza-por-un-mercosur-mas-amplio-y-participativo.html. 26 April 2012.
  4. Web site: La otra sorpresa fue la llegada de Nilda Garré al Ministerio de Defensa. Clarín.
  5. Web site: Beatriz Rojkés de Alperovich será la primera mujer en presidir el Senado . El Dorado Noticias .
  6. Web site: Murió José Pampuro, ex ministro de Defensa. Filo.news. Spanish. 21 January 2020. 21 January 2020.