Post: | First Vice President and Second Vice President |
Body: | the Republic of Peru |
Native Name: | Spanish; Castilian: Primer Vicepresidente Constitucional de la República Spanish; Castilian: Segundo Vicepresidente Constitucional de la República |
Insigniacaption: | Great Seal of the State |
Flagsize: | 130px |
Flagcaption: | Flag of Peru |
Termlength: | Five years, renewable indefinitely |
Appointer: | Only direct popular election |
Incumbent: | First Vice President: Vacant (latest incumbent Dina Boluarte) Second Vice President: Vacant (latest incumbent Mercedes Aráoz) |
Incumbentsince: | 7 December 2022 (First) and 7 May 2020 (Second) |
Residence: | Government Palace |
Formation: | 1823 (Vice President) 1862 (First Vice President and Second Vice President) |
Inaugural: | Diego de Aliaga (1823) Juan Antonio Pezet and Pedro Diez Canseco (1862) |
Succession: | First and Second |
The Republic of Peru has two vice presidents, the First Vice President and the Second Vice President, who are elected along with the President in democratic elections.[1] Their only constitutional mission is to replace the President in case of death, permanent or temporary incapacity, resignation, being abroad without the permission of Congress, failure to return from abroad at fixed time, and/or dismissal or removal from office as allowed by the Constitution.[2] They cannot be appointed outside of general elections.
The First and Second Vice Presidents are first and second in the presidential line of succession.[3] The leader of Congress, the President of the Congress, follows the First Vice President and the Second Vice President in the line of succession.
In modern Peruvian history, two Vice Presidents have acceded to the presidency after the President could no longer serve, Martín Vizcarra and Dina Boluarte. The 32nd First Vice President Martín Vizcarra assumed the office of the presidency in 2018 after the graft scandal that led to the resignation of President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski. The 33rd First Vice President Dina Boluarte assumed the office of the presidency in 2022 after President Pedro Castillo attempted to dissolve Congress and was impeached and removed from the presidency.
Historically, the position was one of a sole Vice President, which was in place in the years 1829–1831 and 1858–1862. The dual positions of First and Second Vice Presidents have been in place since 1862.
The office of the First Vice President is currently vacant, the most recent First Vice President having been Dina Boluarte. The office of the Second Vice President is also currently vacant, the most recent Second Vice President having been Mercedes Aráoz.
The position of Vice President of Peru appeared for the first time in the Constitution of 1823:[4]
"ARTICLE 76: There will be a Vice President in whom the same qualities concur. He/she will administer and withhold Executive Power in event of the death, resignation, or impeachment of the President, or when the president is unable to control the armed forces." Constitution of 1823
The Constitution of 1828 and the Life Constitution of 1826 also proposed only one vice president, who had to be appointed by the president. In the Constitution of 1834, the office was disbanded until the Magna Carta of 1856, which reinstated the sole vice-presidency.
The Constitution of 1860 established two vice-presidents, elected jointly with the President.
Article 89: "There will be two Vice Presidents of the Republic, named first and second, who will be elected at the same time, with the same qualities and for the same period as the President. Constitution of 1860In the Constitution of 1867, the power of vice-presidents was eminently curtailed. However, this constitution held in place for a short period until a successful revolution of that same year restored the Constitution of 1860.
Similarly, the Constitution of 1920 abolished the positions of vice-presidents. The Constitution of 1933 failed to change this, but the office was eventually restored by the second presidency of Óscar R. Benavides, by law on 1 April 1936. In 1939, via plebiscitary consultation, a constitutional amendment was made restoring the office of vice president and second vice president.
The 1993 Constitution and the current constitution in force — put forth by President Alberto Fujimori — recognizes the double vice-presidency in the Executive Branch.
In recent history, there have been two instances where the First Vice President has acceded to the presidency after the President could no longer serve. The 32nd First Vice President Martín Vizcarra assumed the office of the presidency in 2018 after the graft scandal that led to the resignation of President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski. The 33rd First Vice President Dina Boluarte assumed the office of the presidency in 2022 after President Pedro Castillo attempted to dissolve Congress and was impeached and removed from the presidency. No Second Vice President has recently acceded to the presidency.
The office of the First Vice President is currently vacant. The most recent First Vice President is Dina Boluarte, who held the office until 7 December 2022 after President Pedro Castillo's self-coup d'état attempt and removal from the presidency. The office of the Second Vice President is also currently vacant because Castillo's second running mate, Vladimir Cerrón, was disqualified by the National Jury of Elections to run as Second Vice President in the 2021 election due to Cerrón having served a prison sentence for corruption since 2019.[5] [6]
The most recent Second Vice President is Mercedes Aráoz, who held the office until her resignation was accepted by Congress on 7 May 2020.[7] Earlier, on 30 September 2019, the Peruvian Congress had been in the midst of the 2019 Peruvian constitutional crisis and named Aráoz as Acting President after having declared President Martín Vizcarra unfit for office.[7] Given that Congress had itself been dissolved earlier that day by President Vizcarra and that Aráoz supported the Vizcarra's call for new congressional elections, she irrevocably resigned as Second Vice President on 1 October 2019, to leave Vizcarra as the sole claimant to the presidency. Aráoz's resignation was not accepted until 7 May 2020, by a newly elected Congress.[7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]
Portrait | Pos. | Vice President | Political party | Inaugurated | Left office | President | style=width:20em | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | November 1823 | February 1824 | ||||||
- | August 1827 | June 1829 | ||||||
- | 1 September 1829 | 16 April 1831 | ||||||
- | 24 October 1858 | 16 June 1862 | ||||||
First | Military | 24 October 1862 | 5 August 1863 | |||||
Second | ||||||||
First | Military | 2 August 1868 | 27 July 1872 | |||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 2 August 1872 | 2 August 1876 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 2 August 1876 | 18 December 1879 | ||||||
Second | José Francisco Canevaro | |||||||
First | 12 March 1881 | 6 November 1881 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 3 June 1886 | 10 August 1890 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 10 August 1890 | 1 April 1894 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 10 August 1894 | 20 March 1895 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 8 September 1895 | 8 September 1899 | ||||||
Second | Augusto Seminario Váscones | |||||||
First | Alianza Civil-Demócrata | 8 September 1899 | 8 September 1903 | |||||
Second | Federico Bresani | |||||||
First | - | - | Died 13 June 1903 before taking office | |||||
Second | 8 September 1903 | 7 May 1904 | ||||||
First | 24 September 1904 | 24 September 1908 | ||||||
Second | 1907 | |||||||
First | 24 September 1908 | 24 September 1912 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 24 September 1912 | 4 February 1914 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | Alianza Civil-Constitucional-Liberal | 18 August 1915 | 4 July 1919 | |||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 12 October 1919 | 31 October 1922 | ||||||
Second | Agustín de la Torre González | 12 October 1924 | ||||||
First | 13 April 1936 | 8 December 1939 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 8 December 1939 | 28 July 1945 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 28 July 1945 | 29 October 1948 | ||||||
Second | Eduardo Ganoza y Ganoza | |||||||
- | 29 October 1948 | 1 June 1950 | De facto | |||||
First | 28 July 1950 | 28 July 1956 | ||||||
Second | Federico Bolognesi | |||||||
First | 28 July 1956 | 18 July 1962 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 18 July 1962 | 3 March 1963 | De facto | |||||
Second | Pedro Vargas Prada | De facto | ||||||
First | 28 July 1963 | 3 October 1968 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
- | 3 October 1968 | 30 August 1975 | De facto | |||||
- | 30 August 1975 | 28 July 1980 | De facto | |||||
First | Popular Action | 28 July 1980 | 28 July 1985 | [13] | ||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 28 July 1985 | 28 July 1990 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 28 July 1990 | 5 April 1992 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 28 July 1995 | 28 July 2000 | ||||||
Second | ||||||||
First | Peru 2000 | 28 July 2000 | 22 November 2000 | Resigned. | ||||
Second | ||||||||
First | 28 July 2001 | 14 December 2004 | Resigned | |||||
Second | 28 July 2006 | |||||||
First | Luis Giampietri | 28 July 2006 | 28 July 2011 | |||||
Second | Lourdes Mendoza | |||||||
First | Marisol Espinoza | Peruvian Nationalist Party (until 2015)Alliance for Progress (since 2015) | 28 July 2011 | 28 July 2016 | ||||
Second | Omar Chehade | Peruvian Nationalist Party | 16 January 2012 | Resigned | ||||
First | 28 July 2016 | 23 March 2018 | Succeeded Kuczynski as President | |||||
Second | - | |||||||
First | Vacant | 23 March 2018 | 10 November 2020 | Vacant upon Martín Vizcarra's accession to the presidency | ||||
Second | - | 7 May 2020 | Submitted her resignation on 1 October 2019 amidst the 2019–2020 Peruvian constitutional crisis, but her resignation was not officially accepted by Congress until 7 May 2020 | |||||
First | Vacant | 10 November 2020 | 15 November 2020 | |||||
Second | Vacant | |||||||
First | Vacant | 17 November 2020 | 28 July 2021 | |||||
Second | Vacant | |||||||
First | Free Peru (until 2022) Independent (since 2022) | 28 July 2021 | Succeeded Castillo as President | |||||
Second | Vacant | President Pedro Castillo's winning ticket in the 2021 election originally had Vladimir Cerrón as nominee for Second Vice President before Cerrón's removal from the ticket due to his conviction on corruption charges[14] | ||||||
First | Vacant | 7 December 2022 | Vacant since Dina Boluarte's accession to the presidency | |||||
Second | Vacant |
Note 1.While the Constitution itself does not give the Vice Presidents any role beyond deputizing the President, according to the Organic Law of the Executive Branch, however, the Vice Presidents can participate in the sessions and debates of the Council of Ministers "with voice but without vote", can fulfill additional functions that the President entrusts and assigns to them, and are also part of the Presidential Office's support staff.