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Encyclopedia > Enrique Hertzog

Enrique Hertzog Garaizabal (born in La Paz on December 10, 1896; died in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on December 18, 1981) was a Bolivian politician who was elected President of his country in 1947. He resigned in 1949.


A medical doctor by trade, Hertzog joined the Genuine Republican Party of Daniel Salamanca in the 1920s, and rose to become Minister of war during the 1932-35 Chaco conflict against Paraguay. In 1947, he ran for President on a ticket of united Republican factions (former Saavedrists, Genuines, etc.) calling themselves Partido de la Union Republicana Socialista (PURS). He won against the Liberal leader Fernando Guachalla and the reformist candidate Víctor Paz Estenssoro, who led the Movimiento Nacionalista Revolucionario (Nationalist Revolutionary Movement). Daniel Salamanca Urey (July 8, 1869 - July 17, 1935) was president of Bolivia from March 5, 1931 until he was overthrown in a coup detat on November 27, 1934, during the countrys disastrous Chaco War with Paraguay. ... Ángel Víctor Paz Estenssoro (October 7, 1907 - June 7, 2001) was a politician from Bolivia. ... Politics of Bolivia Categories: Politics stubs | Bolivian political parties ...


Hertzog faced innumerable obstacles during his term, mostly in the form of constant rebellion from the lower sectors of society, as represented by striking miners and union workers. He was also saddled with the implacable opposition of Paz's MNR party and its allies, in addition to a declining economy. In essence, the attempt of the privileged sectors (led by Hertzog himself) to "turn back the clock" to the oligarchic pre-Chaco War status quo did not work. Rising expectations and demands from an increasingly activist and indeed, violent, popular class, combined with the unwillingness or inability of the governing elites to give concession that would undermine their power, led the country to the vey brink of civil war. Escalating repressive measures only bred further discontent. When the legislative elections of 1949 confirmed the dramatic ascendancy of the parties of the Left, the PURS leadership lost trust in the relatively more conciliatory Hertzog's ability to conrol the situation. They forced his resignation in favor of his far more combative Vice-President, Mamerto Urriolagoitia, specifying a non-existent illness. A few months later Hertzog was named Bolivian Ambassador in Spain. Following the 1952 Revolution that brought Paz Estenssoro's MNR party to power, the ex-President remained exiled in the Spanish capital until his death (retired from any political activity) in 1981. Mamerto Urriolagoitia (born in Sucre on December 5, 1895; died in Sucre June 4, 1974) was President of his country, Bolivia, from 1949 to 1951. ...


Source

  • Mesa José de; Gisbert, Teresa; and Carlos D. Mesa, "Historia De Bolivia", 3rd edition., pp. 579-582.
Preceded by
Tomás Monje
President of Bolivia
19471949
Succeeded by
Mamerto Urriolagoitia

  Results from FactBites:
 
1947, Jan. 5. 2001. The Encyclopedia of World History (127 words)
Enrique Hertzog, leader of the Republican Socialist Union Party, was elected president.
A strike in the tin mines in May and a rebellion by the outlawed MNR in September were put down by the army, but they left the country on the verge of bankruptcy.
Hertzog resigned because of ill health and was succeeded by V.P.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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