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Adolfo Rodriguez Saa

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Vice President
  
Vacant

Constituency
  
San Luis

Vice Governor
  
Alicia Lemme

Party
  
Justicialist Party

Resigned
  
December 31, 2001

Preceded by
  
Fernando De la Rua

Constituency
  
San Luis

Name
  
Adolfo Saa

Succeeded by
  
Eduardo Duhalde

Siblings
  
Alberto Rodriguez Saa

Adolfo Rodriguez Saa Adolfo Rodrguez Saa Ahora es Cuando
Preceded by
  
Hugo di Rissio (de facto)

Role
  
Former President of Argentina

Previous office
  
President of Argentina (2001–2001)

Similar People
  
Alberto Rodriguez Saa, Margarita Stolbizer, Nicolas del Cano, Sergio Massa, Jose Manuel de la Sota

Adolfo rodriguez saa presidente 2015 vivienda digna y hospitales


Adolfo Rodriguez Saa (born July 25, 1947) is an Argentine Peronist politician. Born in a family that was highly influential in the history of the San Luis Province, he became governor in 1983, after the end of the National Reorganization Process military dictatorship. He remained governor up to 2001, being re-elected in successive elections. President Fernando de la Rua resigned in that year, amid the December 2001 riots, and the Congress appointed Rodriguez Saa as president of Argentina. In response to the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression, he declared the highest sovereign default in history and resigned some days later amid civil unrest. The Congress appointed a new president, Eduardo Duhalde, who completed the term of office of De la Rua. Rodriguez Saa ran for the 2003 and 2015 presidential elections, but did not win.

Contents

Adolfo Rodriguez Saa Adolfo Rodrguez Sa Pre Candidato a Presidente Radiocut

Adolfo rodriguez saa presidente acuerdo economico social


Early life

Rodriguez Saa was born to an important political family in San Luis. The Rodriguez Saa family is well known in the Province of San Luis and can be traced to the 19th century and to descendants of the federal caudillo Juan Saa, who fought in the battle of Pavon during the Argentine Civil War. Rodriguez Saa's grandfather and namesake Adolfo Rodriguez Saa and his great-uncle were both governors of the province, and his father was the police chief.

He attended the "Juan Pascual Pringles" school, which was associated with the National University of Cuyo. He studied law at the University of Buenos Aires, graduating in 1971. He worked as a teacher in his former school for two years. He was an editor of the anti-Peronist pamphlet "La voz de San Luis" (Spanish: The voice of San Luis), but became a Peronist in 1969 during his studies in Buenos Aires. He joined the Peronist Youth in the year of his graduation, and worked as their representative in San Luis.

The Peronist party, proscribed since 1955, was allowed to run for the 1973 elections. The Peronist party won the elections, and Hector Campora became president. Rodriguez Saa became a provincial legislator, and led the Peronist deputies in the chamber. He joined the right-wing Peronist unions, led by Oraldo Britos. He opposed the governor Elias Adre, who was aligned with left-wing Peronism. After the 1976 Argentine coup d'etat, he left politics and worked in a law firm with his brother.

Governor

The National Reorganization Process dictatorship came to an end in 1983, when Raul Alfonsin won the 1983 elections. Rodriguez Saa became governor of San Luis in those elections, in a close contest with the Radical Civic Union. He was helped by the clergy of the province, who opposed the radical candidate because of his secularism.

As a governor, Rodriguez Saa attracted huge investments to the province, which led to the growth of local industries, public works, social services and tourism. Levels of employment and industrial production, and measures of scholastic achievement and crime-fighting success were higher than those of the country at large. He was a populist and authoritarian governor who was accused of nepotism, corruption and restricting freedom of the press. He united the governors of the smaller Argentine provinces in a front, called Frente Federal Solidario.

He ran in the primary elections of the Justicialist Party for the 1989 presidential elections. Carlos Menem, governor of La Rioja, prevailed in both the primary and the main elections and became the new president of Argentina. Rodriguez Saa was elected to the Constituent Assembly that drafted the 1994 amendment of the Argentine Constitution. He attempted to run in the primary elections for the 1995 presidential elections against Menem, who was seeking re-election. Not seeing any chance of prevailing against the president, he abandoned his candidacy. He also attempted to run in the primary elections for the 1999 presidential elections, and resigned his candidacy again, this time on behalf of Eduardo Duhalde, governor of the Buenos Aires Province. Although Duhalde lost the elections to the radical Fernando de la Rua, Rodriguez Saa was again re-elected as governor. He attempted to divide the city of San Luis into four municipalities, as the mayor was a political rival, but had to drop the project because of the popular unrest generated by the proposal.

Presidency

President Fernando de la Rua resigned after the December 2001 riots that had been caused by the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression. As his vice president Carlos Alvarez had resigned as well months before, Congress called for a special assembly to designate a new president. Adolfo Rodriguez Saa became president after being elected with 169 votes to 138. He was supported by the PJ and smaller right-wing parties such as Republican Force and Action for the Republic. The Union Civica Radical (UCR) and Alternative for a Republic of Equals voted against him. He was replaced in the governor's office by vice-governor Maria Alicia Lemme, and took office on December 23, 2001.

Rodriguez Saa got a mandate of interim president, with instructions from the Assembly to call for elections the following March 3, with the run-off on March 17 if needed. The new president completed de la Rua's term of office. Those elections were held with ley de lemas, and the victor took the reins of government on April 5.

During his short time in office, Rodriguez Saa announced the creation of a new currency, the argentino, which would have circulated alongside the peso and the dollar. The civil unrest of previous days resurfaced when he announced his cabinet, as it included Carlos Grosso as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers. Grosso was a very unpopular former mayor of Buenos Aires. As a result, Rodriguez Saa gave up his whole cabinet before they could take office, with the sole exception of Rodolfo Gabrielli, in the Interior Ministry. He also declared a sovereign default on the Argentine national debt, which was celebrated by the chamber of deputies but was the highest sovereign default in history. Those measures, uncharacteristic of an interim president with a brief term of office, were resented by the leaders of the Justicialist party.

Rodriguez Saa prepared a budget bill for 2002, which was sent to the Congress. It included an important decrease in the deficits, as requested by Anne Krueger from the IMF. Krueger also requested a new coparticipation law, to determine the way the nation and the provinces manage tax revenues. He called for a meeting with governors in Chapadmalal, but only six governors attended: Carlos Ruckauf, Juan Carlos Romero, Gildo Insfran, Angel Mazza, Carlos Rovira and Alicia Lemme. Jose Manuel de la Sota, governor of Cordoba, withdrew his support, suspecting that Rodriguez Saa had plans to cancel the elections and stay as president up to 2003. On December 30, he returned to San Luis with Daniel Scioli and resigned, alleging lack of support from the rest of the Justicialist Party. Insfran, Maza and the minister Rodolfo Gabrielli tried to convince him to stay as president; his brother Alberto Rodriguez Saa supported his decision. In announcing his resignation in Cadena nacional, he recounted the achievements of his one-week administration and accused Justicialist governors and legislators of meanness and shortsightedness. He dispatched his resignation from San Luis to Buenos Aires, and the Congress accepted it on January 1, 2002. The Senate chairman Ramon Puerta would have been the interim president, but resigned as well, so Eduardo Camano was appointed interim president instead. After new deliberations, they elected Eduardo Duhalde as president, this time with a mandate that would fill the remaining time of de la Rua's mandate.

Post-presidency

After the end of Eduardo Duhalde's term, Rodriguez Saa ran for president in the April 2003 elections. Those elections allowed the Lemas law, and the PJ did not provide an official candidate. Each precandidate was allowed instead to run for presidency on his own "lema", and Rodriguez Saa did so. The other candidates of the PJ were Nestor Kirchner and Carlos Menem. Rodriguez Saa came in fourth, with 14.1% of the vote, after both of them and Ricardo Lopez Murphy. Kirchner became the president of Argentina after those elections.

Rodriguez Saa's brother Alberto Rodriguez Saa became the new governor of San Luis in 2003. Both of them and Menem attempted to create an alternative political group against Kirchner within the PJ. Adolfo Rodriguez Saa was elected Senator for San Luis for this group at the 2005 election. He has been a senator since then. The mayor Sergio Massa organized the coalition United for a New Alternative to run for the 2015 presidential election and invited Rodriguez Saa to join, but he refused to join and ran with his own party, Federal Commitment.

Rodrigues Saa has worked as a cattle rancher in San Luis since his defeat in the 2003 elections.

Kidnap

Adolfo Rodriguez Saa was kidnapped on October 21, 1993. He was governor of San Luis at the time. He was taken to a room in the hotel "Y no C" and forced to perform for a pornographic video. He was forced to pay a ransom of 3 million dollars, and was left in the trunk of a car. The video has never been made public, and the kidnappers Walter Alejandro Salgado, Nelida Esther Sesin and Eduardo Alberto Doyhenard were sentenced in 1995. The trial took 11 days, and it included the testimonies of 132 witnesses. It was aired on live television. Esther Sesin claimed during the trial that she had been his lover for eight years. All the kidnappers have served their sentences, and currently live in other provinces.

References

Adolfo Rodriguez Saa Wikipedia