President_of_El_Salvador

President of El Salvador

President of El Salvador

Head of state and government of El Salvador


The president of El Salvador (Spanish: presidente de El Salvador), officially titled President of the Republic of El Salvador (Spanish: Presidente de la República de El Salvador), is the head of state and head of government of El Salvador. He is also, by constitutional law, the commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces of El Salvador. The office was created in the Constitution of 1841. From 1821 until 1841, the head of state of El Salvador was styled simply as Head of State (Jefe de Estado).

Quick Facts Type, Residence ...

The President of the Republic of El Salvador begins their duties on 1 June of the year of their election and is accompanied by a vice president.

According to the Electoral Code, for a person to be declared President-Elect of the Republic, they must obtain 50% plus one of the votes obtained in the election in the presidential elections. If none of the candidates gets to obtain that result, a second voting round will be held where the two candidates who have obtained the most electoral votes in the first round will participate.

The duration of the presidential term is five years and the president is eligible for reelection once consecutively as of 2021.

Each 1 June, the president is accountable to the Legislative Assembly for the contributions and Government Development that the president, the vice president and the Council of Ministers developed from the beginning of the presidential term.

History

In 1824, the Mayor's Office of Sonsonate and the Intendancy of San Salvador joined to form the State of El Salvador, united first to the United Provinces of Central America and then to the Federal Republic of Central America. According to the federal law, the governor received the title of Supreme Chief until 1841, when El Salvador declared itself independent, with its governor being called President. From then on, four stages with particular characteristics are recognized: the post-federal period, the Coffee Republic, the military governments, and civil governments.

In 1841, El Salvador was constituted as an independent and sovereign nation after the rupture of the Federal Republic of Central America in 1838. At that time, the legislative body created a constitution to legitimize the nation of El Salvador and also named Juan Lindo Provisional President of the Republic of El Salvador on 2 February 1841. It was not until 26 September 1842 Juan José Guzmán was elected by the people as President of El Salvador. From that moment, the republic suffered a constant series of provisional governments that brought many leaders to power.

In 1858, Captain General Gerardo Barrios became President of the Republic in which his government gave entrance to the "French Bread". He resigned from power in 1863 and Francisco Dueñas became President.

It was not until the Constitution of the Republic of El Salvador of 1886 was ratified when the presidential term is increased from two to four years, beginning and ending the presidential terms on 1 March. In 1913, before the death of Manuel Enrique Araujo, a family 'dynasty' would begin. The Meléndez-Quiñonez Dynasty lasted 18 years until Arturo Araujo became President.

In 1931, a coup d'état led by Vice President General Maximiliano Hernández Martínez overthrew President Araujo. This dictatorial government would establish the foundations of a rigid and totally militarized nation. It was not until 1939 when General Martínez called for a Constituent Assembly to draft a new constitution which established that the presidential term would be increased from 4 to 6 years and would begin and end on 1 January. During his presidency, Martínez initiated La Matanza which killed 25,000 indigenous peoples. Martínez would be overthrown 12 years later in 1944 and General Andrés Ignacio Menéndez became Provisional President.

From that moment, the presidency of the Republic once again showed dictatorial instability and military governments began to be established to the point of creating a republic with 'Military Authoritarianism' which would end in 1982. In 1950, Lieutenant Colonel Óscar Osorio constitutionally became the president of the Republic and a new constitution was drafted where the presidential term would be 6 years and begin and end on 14 September. Osorio was known as the president of the social programs since he implemented and founded programs such as the Urban Housing Institute (IVU), the Autonomous Port Executive Commission (CEPA) among others that benefited the nation.

In 1960, a coup d'état overthrew President José María Lemus which led to the formation of a Junta of Government which would later be overthrown by the Civic-Military Directory in 1961. This was the case until the constitutional order was reestablished and another constitution was created in 1962 which would bring with it significant presidential reforms. From that moment, the presidential term would last 5 years and begin and end on 1 July.

On 15 October 1979, the last coup d'état in Salvadoran history took place where a group of young soldiers and officers overthrew General Carlos Humberto Romero. The coup marked the beginning of the Salvadoran Civil War which would rage on from 1979 to 1992. The Revolutionary Government Junta was established and ruled over El Salvador while fighting against the communist guerrilla group Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN). The Junta was abolished in 1982 and Álvaro Magaña became President of the Republic. The 1983 Constituent Assembly decided to create the current Constitution of El Salvador which set presidential terms to 5 years and would begin and end on June 1. The civil war greatly affected the political stability of the country.

President José Napoleón Duarte would lead the government against the FMLN from 1984 to 1989. In 1989, the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) won the 1989 presidential election. Alfredo Cristiani became the first president of ARENA. ARENA won the presidential elections in 1989, 1994, 1999, and 2004. Its presidents were Alfredo Cristiani, Armando Calderón Sol, Francisco Flores, and Elías Antonio Saca.

The Civil War ended in 1992 and the FMLN became a legal political party in accordance to the Chapultepec Peace Accords.

In 20 years of government, El Salvador was characterized by the privatization of national services such as coffee, telecommunications, the pension system, the National Bank, the Electric Power Service, among others. In 2001, the Economic Dollarization System was carried out in the country, a measure adopted by then President Francisco Flores which would have great long-term consequences for the Salvadoran economy and adopted the US dollar as legal currency.

Mauricio Funes won the 2009 presidential election ending 20 years of ARENA rule and marked the first FMLN presidency. Salvador Sánchez Cerén became the second FMLN president in 2014 after narrowly defeating Norman Quijano.

In 2019, Nayib Bukele, from the Grand Alliance for National Unity (GANA), won the 2019 presidential election ending 10 years of FMLN rule. He was the first president since Duarte to not be a member of either ARENA or FMLN. He was the second president from Palestinian descent, after Elías Antonio Saca. He was inaugurated on 1 June 2019.

Succession

The Salvadoran Constitution establishes that a vice president succeeds as president when the elected president dies, resigns or is removed from office. The other officers in the line of succession are two presidential designates, nominated by the president and elected by the legislature, by order of election.[2] If all of them are absent simultaneously, the legislature elects a provisional president.

Heads of state of El Salvador within the Federal Republic of Central America (1821–1841)

Intendants political leaders of the Province of San Salvador

Political parties

  Liberal
  Military
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Governor of El Salvador

Political parties

  Conservative
  Liberal
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Presidents of El Salvador (1841–present)

Early republic (1841–1885)

Political parties

  Conservative
  Liberal
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

First military dictatorship (1885–1911)

Political parties

  Conservative
  Liberal
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Meléndez–Quiñónez dynasty (1911–1931)

Political parties

  Labor Party
  National Democratic Party
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Second military dictatorship (1931–1979)

Political parties

  National Conciliation Party
  National Pro Patria Party
  Revolutionary Party of Democratic Unification
  Unification Social Democratic Party
  Military
  Independent
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Modern republic (1979–present)

Political parties

  Christian Democratic Party
  Democratic Action Party
  Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front
  Nationalist Republican Alliance
  Grand Alliance for National Unity (until 2021)
  Grand Alliance for National Unity (from 2021)
  Nuevas Ideas
  Military
  Acting or provisional leadership

More information No., Portrait ...

Timeline

Claudia Rodríguez de GuevaraNayib BukeleSalvador Sánchez CerénMauricio FunesAntonio SacaFrancisco Flores PérezArmando Calderón SolAlfredo CristianiJosé Napoleón DuarteÁlvaro MagañaRevolutionary Government Junta of El SalvadorCarlos Humberto RomeroArturo Armando MolinaFidel Sánchez HernándezJulio Adalberto Rivera CarballoEusebio Rodolfo Cordón CeaCivic-Military DirectoryJunta of Government (El Salvador)José María LemusÓscar OsorioRevolutionary Council of GovernmentSalvador Castaneda CastroOsmín Aguirre y SalinasAndrés Ignacio MenéndezMaximiliano Hernández MartínezCivic DirectoryArturo AraujoPío Romero BosqueJorge Meléndez RamírezAlfonso Quiñónez MolinaCarlos Meléndez RamírezManuel Enrique AraujoPedro José EscalónTomás Regalado RomeroRafael Antonio GutiérrezAntonio EzetaCarlos EzetaFrancisco MenéndezJosé Rosales HerradorFernando FigueroaÁngel GuirolaRafael ZaldívarAndrés del ValleManuel MéndezSantiago González PortilloJosé María PeraltaGerardo BarriosMiguel Santín del CastilloLorenzo ZepedaRafael CampoVicente Gómez (politician)José María San MartínFrancisco DueñasRamón Rodríguez (Salvadoran politician)Doroteo VasconcelosJosé Félix QuirósTomás MedinaEugenio AguilarJoaquín Eufrasio GuzmánFrancisco MalespínFermín PalaciosCayetano MolinaDionisio VillacortaJuan José GuzmánJosé Escolástico MarínPedro José ArceJuan LindoNorberto RamírezJosé María SilvaAntonio José CañasTimoteo MenéndezDiego Vigil CocañaFrancisco Gómez (Salvadoran politician)Nicolás EspinozaJosé María SilvaJoaquín Escolán y BalibreraJosé Gregorio SalazarCarlos Salazar CastroJoaquín de San MartínFrancisco MorazánJosé Damián VillacortaJosé María CornejoJuan Vicente VillacortaJuan Manuel RodríguezMariano PradoConsultive Junta (El Salvador)Felipe CodallosVicente FilísolaJosé Matías DelgadoPedro Barriere

Latest election

The TSE published the presidential election's final results on 9 February 2024 and formally ratified the results on 17 February; Bukele won with 84.65 percent of the vote.[83][84] Bukele was the first presidential candidate in Salvadoran history to receive more than two million votes.[85] Among the other candidates, Flores received 6.40 percent of the vote, Sánchez received 5.57 percent, Parada received 2.04 percent, and Renderos and Murillo each received less than 1 percent.[83] On 18 February, the TSE ratified the results of the presidential election,[86] and on 29 February, it granted Bukele and Ulloa their presidential and vice presidential credentials, respectively.[87]

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Results by department

The following table displays the number of votes each candidate received from each of the country's 14 departments as well as from the exterior vote. The candidate with the most votes in a department is in bold and highlighted in their party's color and the runner-up in a department is in bold.

More information Department, Bukele ...

See also


References

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  82. "En Vivo: Cierre de Escrutinio Final de la Elección de Presidente y Vicepresidente 2024" [Live: The Final Scrutiny of the 2024 Election for President and Vice President Closes]. El Mundo (in Spanish). 9 February 2024. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
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  85. "El Salvador: Tribunal Supremo Electoral Emite Notificación Sobre Acta de Escrutinio Final de las Elecciones Presidenciales" [El Salvador: Supreme Electoral Court Issues Notification Regarding the Final Scrutiny of the Presidential Election]. CNN en Español (in Spanish). 18 February 2024. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
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