José Rivas Fontán, (San Martín de Verducido, España on August 31, 1941), is a Spanish politician and teacher who was the Mayor of Pontevedra between 1979 and 1991. He withdrew from public activity in 2004 and is currently retired.
José Rivas Fontán was born on 31 August 1941 in San Martín de Verducido - Xeve, in the municipality and province of Pontevedra. He is the son of Paulino Rivas Maquieira and Elvira Fontán Fontán and was the youngest of three brothers. In 1965, he married Mª Gloria Lis Corral. The couple had four children.
Rivas Fontán grew up in a parish near the town of Pontevedra, where he attended a state primary school, starting at age six. He bicycled to secondary school, and later commuted eight kilometers by bicycle to a Teacher Training college in Pontevedra. He was stationed at the military headquarters in the capital during his compulsory military service. In 1963, he passed the state teachers' entry exam for adult education.
He sat a special exam, set up by the Ministry of Education, for the Organisation of School Services for education inspectors in Pontevedra. There, he launched one of the first applied audiovisual media teaching centres in Spain. In Pontevedra, he met Federico Cifuentes Pérez. Pérez became his boss and friend and, years later, would turn out to be an essential collaborator in the Pontevedra Teachers Movement (MMS).
In Pontevedra towards the end of the 60s and beginning of the 70s, the educational community began to question the educational system which, as much as was possible at that time, had a labour movement, the Spanish Teaching Service (SEM). The new tendency strove to change it, from within, into democratic unionism. This movement would later spread to all the Spanish provinces. This democratic organisation clashed with the political regime (Francisco Franco's dictatorship), and after many difficulties and risks, culminated in the “1st EGB Congress of Pontevedra” in 1977. The Congres was attended by representatives from the whole of Spain as well as by the French “Fédération de l’éducation nationale” (FEN).[1] Because of his work in the Education Inspectors Corps, José Rivas Fontán was familiar with the educational structure in his province and, together with other colleagues, organized this movement organically and territorially into democratically elected cells, with himself as the first Provincial Secretary of the Association. At that time, the Pontevedra Teachers Association published the only issue of the newspaper TEUCRO.[2] After the newspaper had already been sent to all the provinces, it was censored.
On June 15, 1977, there was a free general election in Spain for the first time since 1931. José Rivas was elected to the Spanish Parliament[3] as Deputy for Pontevedra, as a member of the UCD Party. He became a member of the UCD Political Council.[4]
In 1978, he was General Secretary of the Galician Junta's pre-autonomous government under the presidency of Antonio Rosón Pérez. He was Secretary of the Galician Parliamentary Assembly which comprised all elected MPs as well as the senators chosen by the Crown, the Nobel Prize winner Camilo José Cela and Domingo García Sabell. He was constituent Secretary of the 16 Commissions[5] created to draw up the Galician Statutes.
In 1979, he was elected Mayor of Pontevedra for UCD for a 4-year term, then re-elected as an independent candidate for AP and, finally, in 1987, a member of the Independent Galician Party until 1991.
Due to a prolonged persecution by the Head Judge of Number 3 Court in Pontevedra (Luciano Varela), Rivas Fontán left politics, and did not run again in 1991. Rivas denounced the Head Judge to the General Judicial Council and the Ombudsman.[6] After having been tried and judged for anonymous allegations on various occasions, Rivas was acquitted on all counts by the Provincial Court of Pontevedra and the Supreme Court in Madrid.[7]
Rivas Fontán was the spokesperson for the Provincial Museum of Pontevedra Trust from 1979 to 1983. In 1980, he was elected vice-president of the Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces (FEMP). He was spokesperson for the Executive Commission of the Supreme Sports Council representing town councils [8] and for their Board of Directors.[9] In 1983, he was a member of the Directive Committee of the European Council of Municipalities based in Paris. He was in the Spanish Delegation at the European Council's Regional Powers Conference in Strasbourg, France. In 1985, the Ministry of Public Administration (Ministry and FEMP) set up a National Commission to study the upcoming Local Regimen Law,[10] of which he was vice-president. In 1986, he was appointed a trustee of the Alfredo Brañas Cultural Foundation in Santiago de Compostela. He withdrew from political activity between 1991 and 1996.
In 1996 and 2000, he was re-elected as an MP in the 6th [11] and 7th [12] legislatures, acting as a member of Commissions for Education, Public Administration, Infrastructure and Defence. As a member of the latter, he was in the Security Commission of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, attending meetings held in various countries around the world (USA, Germany, Russia, Norway, Slovakia, Macedonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Turkey, Uzbekistan, etc.).