Rosalía Arteaga Explained

Rosalía Arteaga
Order:39th
Office:President of Ecuador
Term Start:9 February 1997
Term End:11 February 1997
Predecessor:Abdalá Bucaram
Successor:Fabián Alarcón
President1:Abdalá Bucaram
Term Start1:10 August 1996
Term End1:6 February 1997
Predecessor1:Eduardo Peña
President2:Fabián Alarcón
Term Start2:11 February 1997
Term End2:30 March 1998
Successor2:Pedro Aguayo Cubillo
Birth Name:Lupe Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
Birth Date:5 December 1956
Birth Place:Cuenca, Azuay, Ecuador
Residence:Quito, Ecuador
Party:Independent Movement for an Authentic Republic
Spouse:Pedro Fernández de Córdova Álvarez
Education:Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador
University of Cuenca

Rosalía Arteaga Serrano (born 5 December 1956) is an Ecuadorian politician who served as the country's first female head of state as acting president for a few days in 1997.[1]

Arteaga announced her intention to stand for secretary-general of the United Nations in the 2021 selection, though incumbent António Guterres was ultimately appointed to a second term in office.[2]

Early life and education

Arteaga was born in Cuenca, Ecuador and attended the University of Cuenca.[3]

Political career

First Vice Presidency (1996-1997)

Arteaga became vice president in 1996, following the election of Abdalá Bucaram as president.[4] However, the first frictions between Bucaram and Arteaga became evident after just a month of being in power: when Bucaram traveled to the 10th Rio Group Summit in Cochabamba (Bolivia) in September 1996, he did not entrust her with power. Their problems were never overcome throughout the short-lived Bucaram administration.[5]

Brief Presidency and Second Vice Presidency (1997-1998)

On 6 February 1997, President Bucaram was declared unfit to govern by Congress. Arteaga and congressional leader Fabián Alarcón became locked in a dispute over who should succeed Bucaram since the constitution was vague on the issue. Initially, Alarcón was sworn in with the support of Congress. On 9 February, however, Arteaga, who had insisted that as Vice President she should become president, was sworn in instead as Ecuador's first female president. Two days later, however, on 11 February, with the support of Congress and the army, Alarcón was sworn in again, and Arteaga resigned as president and reverted to her post as vice president. The political forces in Parliament and, notably, the lack of a constitutional norm on vice presidential succession, eliminated by errors of codification during the Durán-Ballén era, did not allow Arteaga to succeed Bucaram.[6]

Before Bucaram's dismissal, Arteaga had denounced that a coup d'état was being planned from Congress by Alarcón. Consequently, the antipathy between Arteaga, who earlier claimed for herself the Presidency, and Alarcón became immediately evident. Because of this, the first decrees of Alarcón as interim president were to remove the coordination of the social front from the Vice Presidency. Later, Artaga was also impeded from managing the Nuevo Rumbo Cultural program, the remodeling of the Sucre National Theater, and the committee for the construction of new airports as Alarcón's delegate at the National Development Council (CONADE). Finally, she was stripped of her representation in the National Security Council. In the 14 months that Arteaga was part of the Alarcón government, the Vice Presidency lost functions within the state structure and as a development planning body. Her role was, for all purposes, limited to solemnizing inaugurations, processing orders, and sponsoring social events. Moreover, like Bucaram before him, of the eight trips outside abroad that Alarcón made, in five of them Vice President Arteaga was not entrusted with power.[7]

Arteaga continued to clash with Alarcón and took any opportunity, when interviewed by international journalists and correspondents or when abroad, to denounce the unconstitutionality of the Alarcón government. She denounced that Ecuador was experiencing a de facto regime, also earning the antipathy of the military in the process. Finally, when, as she put it, it became "an absurd [to continue] being Vice President," she resigned from her post as vice president in March 1998. She then ran for president in the elections that were held in May 1998 but received only 3% of the vote or a fifth place.[8]

Post-presidency

Arteaga was secretary-general of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization until 2007 and is a member of the editorial board of the Encyclopædia Britannica.[9] She continues to receive a lifetime pension from the Ecuadorian government of $48.690 annually.

With the support of "Forward", a civil society organization, Arteaga announced her intention to seek the position of secretary-general of the United Nations in the 2021 selection. However, incumbent António Guterres was successfully appointed to a second consecutive term as Secretary-General.

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rosalia Arteaga Biography & Facts Britannica . 2023-10-11 . www.britannica.com . en.
  2. Web site: von Hammerstein . Leonie . May 8, 2021 . Could Rosalia Arteaga become the first woman to lead the UN? DW 08.05.2021 . 2022-06-24 . DW . en-GB.
  3. Web site: 24 October 2021 . Aniversario de la "Universidad de Cuenca" - Diario El Mercurio . 2022-06-24 . El Mercurio . es.
  4. Web site: Vicepresidentes en la historia. vicepresidencia.gob.ec. 25 November 2017.
  5. https://hoy.tawsa.com/noticias-ecuador/los-personajes-del-alarconato-488.html
  6. https://hoy.tawsa.com/noticias-ecuador/los-personajes-del-alarconato-488.html
  7. https://hoy.tawsa.com/noticias-ecuador/los-personajes-del-alarconato-488.html
  8. https://hoy.tawsa.com/noticias-ecuador/los-personajes-del-alarconato-488.html
  9. http://corporate.britannica.com/board/arteaga.html Encyclopædia Britannica – About the Editorial Board