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![]() Honorable Government Junta of Bolivia 1946–1947 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Members of the Superior Court of Justice of the judicial district of La Paz | |||||||
Office | Member | Party | Position | Term | Days | ||
President | Néstor Guillén | Ind. | Superior District Court Dean | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||
Magistrate | Cleto Cabrera García | Ind. | Superior District Court Judge | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||
Juan Armaza Ribert | Ind. | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||||
Carlos Pacheco Núñez | Ind. | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||||
Pacífico Ledezma | Ind. | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||||
Daniel Guisbert | Ind. | 21 July 1946 – 22 July 1946 | 1 | ||||
Members of the Government Junta | |||||||
Office | Member | Party | Representing | Term | Days | ||
President | Néstor Guillén | Ind. | Superior District Court Dean | 22 July 1946 – 24 July 1946 | 2 | ||
Magistrate | Cleto Cabrera García | Ind. | Superior District Court of La Paz | 22 July 1946 – 24 July 1946 | 2 | ||
Secretary-General of the Junta | Raúl Calvimontes | – | Civilian sector | 22 July 1946 – 24 July 1946 | 2 | ||
None | Carlos Montaño Daza | – | 22 July 1946 – 24 July 1946 | 2 | |||
Members of the provisional Government Junta | |||||||
Office | Member | Party | Representing | Term | Days | ||
President | Néstor Guillén | Ind. | Superior District Court Dean | 24 July 1946 – 17 August 1946 | 24 | ||
Tomás Monje | Ind. | Superior District Court President | 17 August 1946 – 10 March 1947 | 205 | |||
None | Roberto Bilbao la Vieja | – | Civilian sector | 24 July 1946 – 6 August 1946 | 13 | ||
Secretary-General of the Junta | 6 August 1946 – 10 March 1947 | 216 | |||||
Minister of Government | Minister of Public Works | Cleto Cabrera García | Ind. | Superior District Court of La Paz | 24 July 1946 – 26 August 1946 | 33 | |
Minister of Defense | Minister of Agriculture | Néstor Guillén | Ind. | 24 July 1946 – 26 August 1946 | 33 | ||
Minister of Finance | Luis Gosalvez Indaburu | – | Higher University of San Andrés | 24 July 1946 – 26 August 1946 | 33 | ||
None | 26 August 1946 – 10 March 1947 | 196 | |||||
Minister of Education | Aniceto Solares | PRG | Teachers' Confederation | 24 July 1946 – 26 August 1946 | 33 | ||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | 24 July 1946 – 7 March 1947 | 226 | |||||
Minister of Work | Aurelio Alcoba | PIR | Trade Union Confederation of Bolivian Workers | 24 July 1946 – 10 March 1947 | 229 |
Gualberto Villarroel López was a Bolivian military officer who served as the 39th president of Bolivia from 1943 to 1946. A reformist, sometimes compared with Argentina's Juan Perón, he is nonetheless remembered for his alleged fascist sympathies and his violent demise on 21 July 1946.
Narciso Campero Leyes was a Bolivian general and politician who served as the 20th president of Bolivia from 1880 to 1884. The Narciso Campero Province was named after him.
Néstor Guillén Olmos was a Bolivian lawyer and politician who served as the 40th president of Bolivia on a de facto interim basis in 1946.
Tomás Monje Gutierréz was a Bolivian judge who served as the 41st president of Bolivia on a de facto interim basis from 1946 to 1947.
The Foreign Minister of Bolivia is the head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The current minister is Celinda Sosa Lunda, who was appointed by president Luis Arce in November 2023.
Bolivia has experienced more than 190 coups d'état and revolutions since its independence was declared in 1825. Since 1950, Bolivia has seen the most coups of any other country. The last known attempt was in 1984, two years after the country's transition to democracy in 1982.
Gualberto Villarroel assumed office as the 39th President of Bolivia on 20 December 1943, and his term was violently cut short by his death on 21 July 1946. A colonel during the Chaco War, Villarroel and the Reason for the Fatherland (RADEPA) military lodge joined the fledgling Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) to overthrow President Enrique Peñaranda in a coup d'état.
Enrique Peñaranda assumed office as the 38th President of Bolivia on 15 April 1940, and his term was terminated by a coup d'état on 20 December 1943. A general in the Chaco War, Peñaranda was brought forth by the traditional conservative political parties, sidelined since the end of the Chaco War, as their candidate in the 1940 general elections.
The Cabinet of David Toro constituted the 97th national cabinet of the Republic of Bolivia. It was a component of the Government Junta led by President David Toro and was in office from 17 May 1936 to 13 July 1937.
Néstor Guillén assumed office as the interim 40th President of Bolivia on 21 July 1946, and his mandate ended on 17 August 1946. A magistrate of the Superior District Court of La Paz, Guillén was chosen to lead an interim junta in the absence of the President of the District Court Tomás Monje, who was ill at the time, in the wake of the violent demise of President Gualberto Villarroel.
Tomás Monje assumed office as the interim 41st President of Bolivia on 17 August 1946, and his mandate ended on 10 March 1947. The President of the Superior District Court of La Paz, Monje was chosen to lead an interim junta following the violent overthrow of President Gualberto Villarroel on 21 July 1946. Having been ill at the time, Monje only assumed the position 27 days later, chairing the junta until new elections could be held.
Enrique Hertzog assumed office as the 42nd president of Bolivia on 10 March 1947, and his term ended upon his resignation on 22 October 1949. A physician who served in various ministerial positions since the 1920s, Hertzog was elected as the head of the Republican Socialist Unity Party (PURS) ticket in the 1947 general elections.
Gabriel Gosálvez Tejada was a Bolivian politician, journalist, economist, and diplomat. Throughout his political career, Gosálvez held various ministerial officers and diplomatic posts as a member of the United Socialist Party. When that party merged into the Republican Socialist Unity Party, Gosálvez was presented as its presidential candidate in the 1951 general election.
The Government Junta of Bolivia, known from 21 June 1936 as the Military Government Junta, was a civil-military junta which ruled Bolivia from 17 May 1936 through 28 May 1938. It consisted of representatives of both the armed forces as well as the civilian sector, including moderate socialists and organized labor leaders. The President of the Junta was Colonel David Toro who came to power on 22 May 1936, six days after a coup d'état which overthrew the previous government. Toro presided over a reformist experiment known as Military Socialism for a little over a year before being overthrown himself in another coup d'état which allowed Lieutenant Colonel Germán Busch to succeed to lead the junta on 13 July 1937. The junta was dissolved on 28 May 1938 when the National Convention elected Busch Constitutional President of the Republic.
The Government Junta of Bolivia was a civil-military junta which ruled Bolivia from 20 December 1943 through 5 April 1944. It consisted of representatives of the armed forces through the Reason for Fatherland (RADEPA) military lodge as well as members of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR). The President of the Junta was Colonel Gualberto Villarroel who came to power after a coup d'état which overthrew the government of Enrique Peñaranda. Immediately upon its inception, the junta faced a diplomatic blockade by the United States who viewed the MNR as sympathetic to the fascist powers of World War II and as such led the rest of Latin America in refusing to recognize the new regime until all members of the MNR were removed from the administration. After months of attempted negotiations and the removal of several cabinet ministers, the government finally relented and dismissed all remaining MNR members, dissolving the junta and entrusting Villarroel with the provisional Presidency of the Republic on 5 April 1944.
Mamerto Urriolagoitía assumed office as the 43rd President of Bolivia on 24 October 1949, and his term was terminated upon his resignation in a self-coup on 16 May 1951. The vice president of Enrique Hertzog, Urriolagoitía had already been serving as acting president since 7 May 1949 but officially took office after Hertzog presented his resignation on 22 October.
The 1946 La Paz riots were a series of increasingly violent strikes and protests which culminated in the lynching and hanging of then president Gualberto Villarroel and the complete collapse of his government. The riots occurred in the Bolivian capital of La Paz between 8 and 21 July 1946. What started as teachers' strikes demanding increased wages quickly escalated as university students, organized labor workers, and civilians clashed with municipal police and armed, pro-government civilians. By the end, interim control of the country was handed to a junta of representatives of the three striking groups chaired by independent magistrates of the Superior Court of Justice of the judicial district of La Paz.
Carlos Montenegro Quiroga was a Bolivian lawyer, journalist, politician, and writer who served as minister of agriculture from 1943 to 1944. He was the principal political theorist of the Revolutionary Nationalist Movement, co-founding the party newspaper La Calle which laid the ideological bases of the party. His most famous work, Nacionalismo y coloniaje (1943), an essay on the influence of journalism in the history of Bolivia, is considered to be one of the most influential works in Bolivian historiography.
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