Mario Meoni Explained

Mario Meoni
Office:Minister of Transport
President:Alberto Fernández
Term Start:10 December 2019
Term End:23 April 2021
Predecessor:Guillermo Dietrich
Successor:Alexis Guerrera
Office1:Mayor of Junín
Term Start1:10 December 2003
Term End1:10 December 2015
Predecessor1:Abel Paulino Miguel
Successor1:Pablo Petrecca
Office2:Provincial Deputy of Buenos Aires
Term Start2:10 December 1999
Term End2:10 December 2003
Constituency2:Fourth Electoral Section
Birth Name:Mario Andrés Meoni
Birth Date:22 January 1965
Birth Place:Ascensión, General Arenales, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Death Place:San Andrés de Giles Partido, Argentina
Children:2

Mario Andrés Meoni (22 January 196523 April 2021) was an Argentine politician who served as Minister of Transport from 2019 until his death in 2021. He had previously served as intendente (mayor) of Junín, a partido in Buenos Aires Province, from 2003 to 2015.

Early and personal life

Mario Andrés Meoni was born in 1965 in a road camp in Ascensión, a small town in General Arenales Partido in northern Buenos Aires Province.[1] His father was a roadway maintenance worker, and he was of Italian descent through his grandfather, who worked as a smith.[1] [2] His family moved to Junín when he was six years old.

He became interested in political activism after the return of democracy to Argentina in 1983, being drawn to the Radical Civic Union (UCR) inspired by President Raúl Alfonsín.[3] Meoni's political career began as private secretary to then-UCR senator Leopoldo Moreau.[4]

Meoni married Laura Oliva in 1991 and together they had twin sons.[5]

Political career

In 1987, Meoni was hired to work in the Plan Alimentario Nacional (PAN) of the Ministry of Social Action, during the presidency of Raúl Alfonsín. From 1991 to 1995 he was a local councillor in Junín, then going on to work as secretary of the UCR parliamentary bloc in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies from 1995 to 1999.[3]

In 1999 Meoni was elected to the Buenos Aires Province Chamber of Deputies in the UCR list, representing the fourth electoral district; he was the parliamentary bloc's vice president.[6]

Intendencia of Junín

In 2003, after several unsuccessful runs, Meoni won the UCR primary to the intendencia (mayoralty) of Junín.[4] He was elected mayor on 14 September 2003 with 38.34% of the vote.

Ahead of the 2007 general election, Meoni left the ranks of the UCR and joined the dissident "Radicales K" who supported the Kirchnerist government and the presidential candidacy of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner; thus he ran for re-election in the provincial list of the Plural Consensus coalition.[4] [7]

During his second term as intendente, Meoni became a major collaborator of the OAS-based MuNET local development and transparency programme.[8]

Following the 2008 conflict between the government and farmers, in 2010 Meoni joined other radicales K who followed Vice President Julio Cobos in abandoning the Plural Consensus front and petitioning the UCR to allow them back into the party.[9] Meoni went on to call for a public referendum to validate Cobos's permanency in his post following his controversial vote against Resolution 125, an idea that never materialized.[10]

Meoni ran for a third term in 2011, this time forming part of Unión Social para el Desarrollo (UDESO), the electoral alliance that backed the presidential candidacy of Ricardo Alfonsín.[10] On that occasion, Meoni won with 41.27% against the candidate from the Front for Victory.[4] During his third term and starting in 2013, Meoni became close to Sergio Massa's Renewal Front.[11] [4] [2]

In 2015, Meoni ran for a fourth term, this time under the United for a New Alternative coalition of which the Renewal Front was part.[12] Meoni lost against the PRO candidate, Pablo Petracca, by over 7 thousand votes.[13]

Banco Provincia and Ministry of Transport

On 14 January 2016, Meoni was appointed one of the members of the directive board of the Bank of the Province of Buenos Aires (Banco Provincia) by the Provincial Senate of Buenos Aires, representing the Renewal Front and in replacement of Daniel Arroyo.[14] [15] At the 2019 general election, Meoni ran again for the mayoralty of Junín against incumbent Petracca, but failed to regain the district and lost by a wide margin.[16]

On 6 December 2019, President-elect Alberto Fernández announced the composition of his incoming cabinet, in which Meoni was touted to be the next Minister of Transport, succeeding Guillermo Dietrich.[6] [5] He took office alongside the rest of the cabinet on 10 December 2019.[17] [18]

Death

Just before 10 p.m. on 23 April 2021, Meoni died when his Ford Mondeo lost control and overturned on Route 7 near San Andrés de Giles, a town in Buenos Aires Province.[19] He was 56 years old.He was heading towards Junín, the city he had previously served in and where his family lives.[20]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mario Meoni: "Estamos desarrollando un subsidio al transporte enfocado en las personas y no en las empresas". Infobae. Mercado. Silvia. 2 February 2020. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  2. Web site: Mario Meoni, colaborador de la OEA, se destaca por sus "políticas innovadoras". El Litoral. 6 December 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  3. Web site: ¿Quién es Mario Meoni?. Ámbito. 6 December 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  4. Web site: Quién es el intendente de Junín, Mario Meoni. 11 March 2013. 3 May 2020. infonews.com. Spanish.
  5. Web site: Mario Meoni, el operador radical de Massa que deberá lidiar con Moyano y las empresas de transporte. La Nación. Veneranda. Marcelo. 6 December 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  6. Web site: Mario Meoni, el ministro de Transporte. Página/12. 7 December 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  7. Web site: Una joven generación que creció en la democracia y se afianza en la política. 24 November 2008. Capriata. Laura. 3 May 2020. Spanish. La Nación.
  8. Web site: Mario Meoni, el exradical que ocupará la cartera de Transporte. cba24n.com.ar. Higa. Satoshi. 5 December 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  9. Web site: Cobistas bonaerenses vuelven a la UCR después de la fallida experiencia de la concertación. Hansen. Mariano. 26 March 2010. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  10. Web site: Mario Meoni, de la Coordinadora a aliado eventual del macrismo. Télam. 11 March 2013. 3 May 2020. Rajcher. Silvia. Spanish.
  11. Web site: Este viernes Sergio Massa viene a Junín a un encuentro del Frente Renovador. El Regional Digital. 19 November 2014. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  12. Web site: Massa entrena con un intendente de "sparring" para el debate con De la Sota. Clarín. 15 June 2015. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  13. Web site: Petrecca es el nuevo intendente de Junín. diariodemocracia.com. 25 October 2015. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  14. Web site: Meoni, uno de los cinco nuevos directores del Banco Provincia. 15 January 2016. 3 May 2020. diariodemocracia.com. Spanish.
  15. Web site: Puja por sillas en el Bapro. Ámbito. 16 January 2020. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  16. Web site: Junín: derrotado, Meoni advirtió que no volverá a ser candidato a intendente. Letra P. 29 October 2019. 3 May 2020. Spanish.
  17. Web site: 24 April 2021. Argentine transport minister dies in traffic accident. 24 April 2021. Reuters.
  18. Web site: Página12. 7 December 2019. Mario Meoni, el ministro de Transporte El ex intendente de Junín quedará a cargo de área. 24 April 2021. PAGINA12.
  19. Web site: 23 April 2021 . Murió el ministro de Transporte Mario Meoni en un accidente automovilístico . 2024-03-23 . www.ambito.com.
  20. Web site: Argentine Transport Minister Meoni dies in car crash aged 56. 24 April 2021. MercoPress. en.