Everything about Jos L Pez Portillo totally explained
José López Portillo y Pacheco (a.k.a. "Jolopo") (
June 16 1920 –
February 17 2004) was the
President of
Mexico from
1976 to
1982.
Born in
Mexico City, López Portillo studied
Law at the
National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) before beginning his political career with the
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in
1959.
He held several positions in the administrations of his two predecessors before being appointed to serve as finance minister under
Luis Echeverría, a close friend, from
1973 to
1975.
López Portillo undertook an ambitious program to promote Mexico's economic development with revenues stemming from the discovery of new petroleum reserves in the states of
Veracruz and
Tabasco by
Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex), the country's publicly owned oil company.
López Portillo undertook actions which were highly controversial with respect to the international banking establishment. One of his last actions as president, announced during his annual State of the Nation address on
September 1 1982, was to order the
nationalization of the country's
banking system.
López Portillo was the last
nationalist president to emerge from the ranks of the
PRI. Subsequent presidents have all been U.S.-educated advocates of free trade (
librecambismo).
His opponents internationally and domestically accused López Portillo of "rampant corruption," "excessive overseas borrowing," galloping inflation (which continued with his successor), and responsibility for devaluations of the
peso.
His obituary in the
New York Times referred to his well publicized generosity toward his mistress,
Rosa Luz Alegría as "a symbol of the era's political decadence". He bought her a US$2 million mansion in
Acapulco.
Presidential Succession
In the year leading to the end of his term as president,
December 1,
1982, López Portillo personally chose two candidates as possibilities to replace himself, following the succession ritual established by the
PRI party. One,
Javier García Paniagua would be the anointed one if a man of greater political skill were needed, and the other, ultimately his successor
Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado was chosen for his financial and administrative skills, deemed much more necessary after the devaluation of the peso and the financial crisis of those years.
Mauricio González de la Garza wrote a book during this time period, "
Última Llamada" or "
Last Call" meant as a wake-up call for a democratic Mexico. The publication of the book was a catalyst for change in Mexican Politics. Among other effects the publication of the book brought threats and persecution to González de la Garza, prompting him to seek sanctuary in
Falfurrias,
Texas for a period of time.
Personal
In
1995, López Portillo married his former mistress, the
Yugoslavian-born actress
Sasha Montenegro. They had two children but separated years later. Legal battles erupted between Montenegro and the children from his first marriage, to
Carmen Romano.
As of 2005 legal battles over the fortune of the ex-president continue. It is claimed that López Portillo and
Sasha Montenegro were lovers when he was President, and that her relationship with the President gave her considerable support in building her career farther into the
1980s.
He was the brother of late Mexican novelist
Margarita López Portillo who died on
May 8,
2006 of natural causes. She was the Director of all Film and Radio as well as Television under her brother and fairly responsible for the corruption of the time in many areas of the entertainment industry, which included the protection of
Sasha Montenegro from the
Press and her future in-laws.
Around
1980, López Portillo forbade the teaching of cursive writing in all of its schools, both public and private. Mexican schoolchildren could learn only to print and nothing more. The reasons for this outrageous mandate have never been made clear.
Quotations
» ¡Defenderé el peso como un perro! – "I will defend the peso like a dog!" It earned him the nickname 'El perro' (The dog) and having people barking at him.
1981.
» Ya nos saquearon. México no se ha acabado. ¡No nos volverán a saquear! – "We have already been ransacked. Mexico isn't finished. They won't ransack us again!"
September 1 1982.
» ¡Mi hijo es el orgullo de mi nepotismo! – "My son is the pride of my nepotism."
» En el mundo de la economía los paises se dividen en dos: los que tienen petróleo y los que no lo tienen. ¡Y nosotros lo tenemos! – "In the world of economy, countries are divided in two: those that have oil and those that don't have it. And we've it!
"
» ¡Vamos a administrar la abundancia! – "We are going to manage abundance!"
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