Luis Alva Castro Explained

Honorific Suffix:OSP
Luis Alva Castro
Office:President of Congress
Term Start:July 26, 2009
Term End:July 26, 2010
Successor:César Zumaeta
Office2:Minister of the Interior
President2:Alan García
Primeminister2:Jorge Del Castillo
Term Start2:February 26, 2007
Term End2:October 14, 2008
Predecessor2:Pilar Mazzetti
Successor2:Remigio Hernani Meloni
Office3:Member of Congress
Constituency3:La Libertad
Constituency4:National
Term Start3:July 26, 2001
Term End3:July 26, 2011
Term Start4:July 26, 2000
Term End4:July 26, 2001
Office5:President of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start5:July 26, 1987
Term End5:July 26, 1988
Predecessor5:Fernando León de Vivero
Successor5:Héctor Vargas Haya
Office6:Prime Minister of Peru
President6:Alan García
Term Start6:July 28, 1985
Term End6:June 26, 1987
Predecessor6:Luis Pércovich Roca
Successor6:Guillermo Larco Cox
Office7:Minister of Economy and Finance
Primeminister7:Luis Alva Castro
President7:Alan García
Term Start7:July 28, 1985
Term End7:June 26, 1987
Predecessor7:Guillermo Garrido-Lecca Álvarez
Successor7:Gustavo Saberbein Chevalier
Office8:Second Vice President of Peru
President8:Alan García
Term Start8:July 28, 1985
Term End8:July 28, 1990
Predecessor8:Javier Alva Orlandini
Successor8:Carlos García y García
Office9:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Constituency9:La Libertad
Term Start9:July 26, 1980
Term End9:July 26, 1990
Office10:Secretary General of the Peruvian Aprista Party
Term Start10:1989
Term End10:1992
Predecessor10:Luis Negreiros
Successor10:Alan García
Birth Name:Luis Juan Alva Castro
Birth Date:1942 2, df=y
Birth Place:Trujillo, La Libertad, Peru
Party:Partido Aprista Peruano
Education:National University of Trujillo

Luis Juan Alva Castro (born 17 February 1942) is a Peruvian economist and politician. In his political career, he achieved the government positions of Second Vice President of Peru, Prime Minister of Peru, President of the Congress and among other portfolios during both administrations of President Alan García.

A prominent member of the Peruvian Aprista Party, he was the party's presidential nominee in 1990, getting 22.5% of the vote and placing third overall and failed to qualify for the runoff that was eventually won by Alberto Fujimori. He has authored numerous works about Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre's lifetime, being considered one of the few historians of "Aprismo" in Peru. He currently presides the editorial "Instituto Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre", which publishes his works.

Biography

Luis Alva Castro was born in the city of Trujillo, in a family with a long Aprista tradition. His parents were Luis Alva and Rosalía Castro.

Transferred to Lima, he completed his primary studies at the Claretian School and his secondary studies at the Leoncio Prado Military School. He returned to his hometown and in 1960 he entered the Faculty of Economics at the National University of Trujillo, where he graduated from high school and obtained the title of economist, thanks to his thesis on "Economic Integration of Latin America" (1964).

In 1996, he studied a postgraduate degree in Political Science at the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega University.

Political career

Early political career

Alva started at a very young age in the Peruvian Aprista Party, being part of the youth wing since he was 15 years old. His first partisan office was Secretary of the Northern Regional Command in 1965. He graduated in 1964 with a Bachelor in Economics from the National University of Trujillo, based on the merit of his thesis titled "Economic Integration of Latin America".

At 24, he was a member of the board of directors of the Development Corporation of La Libertad (CORLIB), whose experience in planning and management applied him as an executive of private and public companies. The military government of Juan Velasco Alvarado unjustly accused him of mishandling and was imprisoned in a Trujillo prison, from 1970 to 1972.

During the development of the Constituent Assembly of 1978–1979, he served as Private Secretary of Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, becoming one of his most conspicuous disciples.

Congress

In the 1980 general election, he was the Campaign Head of Peruvian Aprista Party presidential nominee Armando Villanueva. He was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, representing La Libertad for the 1980–1985 term, serving as the Party Spokesperson.

In government

In 1985, he was selected as part of Alan García presidential ticket for the 1985 general election in which he was the second running mate of García. Jointly reelected to Congress, he was appointed Prime Minister and Finance Minister,[1] serving between 1985 and 1987.[2] Peru developed a steady economy during his tenure, promoting heterodoxy as a good start. The economic plan proposed by Alan García clashed with Alva, leaving his post as the economy would prove to be artificial, evolving into a catastrophic policy of Macroeconomic populism.

One month later after his resignation as both Prime Minister and Finance Minister, Alva was elected as President of the Chamber of Deputies, serving for one year.[3] His increasing party support would prove him as a potential rival in the party leadership to president Alan García. In 1989, he was elected as Secretary General of the Peruvian Aprista Party.

1990 presidential campaign

With the country in crisis and the constant attacks from the Shining Path and MRTA, the population participated in the 1990 general election. Since 1987, acclaimed writer Mario Vargas Llosa had prepared a full-scale presidential campaign with the Democratic Front coalition, composed of Liberty Movement, the Christian People's Party and Popular Action, the last two being traditional parties. The Peruvian Aprista Party nominated Alva[4] to run for the Presidency against Vargas Llosa, although it was clear that the latter would win in the first round. Unexpectedly, third party nominee and virtually unknown Alberto Fujimori of Cambio 90 rose in the polls with a clear anti-partisan speech, beating Alva to the second round as the APRA achieved 22.5% of the popular vote and placed third. The election outcome would give victory to Alberto Fujimori, with most analysts discussing a possible agreement with president Alan García, as Alva's votes would pass on to Fujimori.

Return to Congress

The Peruvian Aprista Party, led by Alva from outside Congress as Secretary General, achieved 53 deputies and 16 senators, representing a third of each chamber. The congressional term would end with the 1992 self-coup, which dissolved the entire legislative branch.

In the following years, under the Fujimori's government, Alva would not have greater political participation, except in his party when he was elected again as Secretary General in 1996, a position he held until 1999.

In the 2000 general election, he was elected to Congress with a majority of 35,336 votes. The 2000–2005 term would be shortened with the convoking of new general elections for 2001, due to the corruption allegations against Alberto Fujimori and his resignation. In those elections, Alva was reelected to Congress with a majority of 95,050 votes. Based on his experience and high vote count, he was appointed Party Spokesperson, a position he exerted while serving in the abolished Chamber of Deputies. He also served as President of the Andean Community of Nations in 2001.

In August 2005, he was appointed as President of the Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre Private Institute. During this time, he published a renowned work titled "The Asylum Man" (El Señor Asilo), based Haya de la Torre's experience as political refugee in the Colombian Embassy in Peru, during the proceedings of the Asylum case determined by the International Court of Justice.

For the 2006 general election, Alva was appointed Peruvian Aprista Party Campaign Head for the North, proving the victory for Alan García with the Aprista stronghold in the North of Peru. Conjointly, he was reelected for a third term in Congress, with a majority of 57,409 votes. During the 2006–2011 parliamentary term, he was elected President of the Congress for a year in 2009, for the 2009-2010, being his first time in charge of the same legislative body since 1987 when he was the President of the Chamber of Deputies.[5]

Second García administration

Alva was Minister of the Interior from 2007 to 2008, succeeding Pilar Mazzetti. His tenure lasted a little more than a year and a half. After the resignation of Jorge del Castillo as Prime Minister due to the 2008 Peru oil scandal, Alva Castro was not confirmed in his position by new Prime Minister Yehude Simon, being succeeded by former Police General Remigio Hernani Meloni.

Post-Congressional career

Alva failed to achieve a fourth reelection to Congress in the 2011 general election. During the campaign, he was involved in a deadly car accident in the Agallpampa District, Otuzco Province. He was the only survivor, as the other Peruvian Aprista Party provincial leaders accompanying him perished in the accident.[6]

Controversies

On 11 April 2019, at the request of chief prosecutor José Domingo Pérez, judge Richard Concepción Carhuancho gave Alva impediment to leave the country for 18 months, for alleged money laundering, in the framework of the investigation by Odebrecht scandal in Peru. According to the prosecutor's thesis, Alva, in his position of Campaign Head, personally managed to have the Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht financially support the 2006 Peruvian Aprista Party election campaign, having received USD $200,000 in bribes.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Presidentes y vicepresidentes desde 1980 en Perú, crisis y realidades. 26 July 2018.
  2. Web site: Ministerio de Economía y Finanzas - Histórico - Relación de Ministros. www.mef.gob.pe.
  3. Web site: Luis Juan Alva Castro.
  4. News: El candidato del APRA asegura que "los peruanos pobres no votarán por los ricos". El País. 6 April 1990. Comas. José.
  5. Web site: Presidentes del Congreso de 2001 al 2050.
  6. Web site: Luis Alva Castro sufrió un accidente de carretera en la Libertad. 4 April 2011.
  7. Web site: Caso Odebrecht: Luis Alva Castro no podrá salir del país por 18 meses | POLITICA. 11 April 2019.