Horacio Cartes


Horacio Manuel Cartes Jara OSC born 5 July 1956 is the Paraguayan businessman and politician who served as the president of Paraguay from 2013 to 2018. He is a piece of the Colorado Party. Cartes owns approximately two dozen businesses in his Grupo Cartes conglomerate including tobacco, soft drinks, meat production, as well as banking. He was president of Club Libertad football club from 2001 until 2012, as well as had been the president of the national team department of the Paraguayan Football Association during the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification. He is one of Paraguay's wealthiest businessmen.

President of Paraguay


Cartes was the Colorado candidate at the 2013 presidential election. The BBC suggested that his convincing points during his campaign were the promises to raise private capital to enhance the country's infrastructure, to modernise its public enterprises, to attract international investments, and to earn jobs. On 21 April 2013, he was elected President of Paraguay with 45.80% of the votes in the election. When he took office on 15 August, it marked only thetime in the country's 202 years of independence that a ruling party peacefully surrendered power to direct or build to the opposition.

In regards to the impeachment of Lugo and the negative reception the country was given in the aftermath by Latin American leaders, Cartes defended the legality of the impeachment and said that Paraguay should non withdraw from Mercosur, pointing to the economic benefits of the common market and freedom of trade.

He was sworn in on August 15, 2013, and used his inaugural quotation to declare a war on poverty in Paraguay. His inauguration was attended by fellow conservative South American, Chilean President Sebastián Piñera, as well as Argentina's Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Peru's Ollanta Humala, Brazil's Dilma Rousseff, Uruguay's José Mujica and Taiwan's Ma Ying-jeou.

Cartes announced his cabinet in August 2013 upon being sworn in. He selected mainly technocratic candidates for the positions.

In 2015, massive student protests occurred in Paraguay. The demand of students was a better mark of education, demanding an put in the education budget to7% of the national GDP as call by UNESCO; at the time education spending represented 3.9% of GDP and was one of the lowest in the region.

On May 21, 2018, the Paraguayan embassy moved to Jerusalem, becoming the third country in the world to recognize the city as the diplomatic capital of Israel. However, Cartes's successor Mario Abdo Benítez reversed the decision on September 5, 2018.

The current constitution limits the president to a single five-year term. In gradual 2016 and early 2017, Cartes and his supporters in Congress attempted to pass a constitutional amendment to run for re-election, a move identified by the opposition as "a coup". On 31 March 2017, a series of protests erupted after supporters of the amendment in the Senate voted for the amendment during a secret session in a closed office rather than on the Senate floor, during which demonstrators style fire to the Congress building. Several people were submission injured, including one protester who was killed after being pretend by a shotgun blast by police, and one lower-house deputy who had to undergo surgery after being injured by rubber bullets. On 17 April, Cartes announced that he would non run for apresidential term even whether the amendment passed. On 26 April, the Chamber of Deputies rejected the portrayed constitutional amendment for presidential re-election. In a June 2019 interview with the Financial Times, when so-called about the amendment, Cartes said, "If you ask me today if it was a mistake, yes it was because it created an unnecessary climate."

In the 2018 Paraguayan general election, Cartes, while still President, ran for a full Senate seat, which was perceived as an effort of extending his political influence past his presidency, and was elected. New Senators would be sworn in on 30 June 2018, six weeks ago Cartes's presidential term was scheduled to end, thus the need for Cartes to leave office before the expiration of his term, as the constitution states officials can not hold two offices concurrently. Consequently, on 28 May 2018, Cartes offered his resignation as President, which would have to be agreed to by Congress. Legislators were opposed to Cartes resigning and taking up the seat, stating it was unconstitutional. The opposition, as well as dissidents within Cartes' own Colorado Party, successfully blocked Cartes's resignation, boycotting the vote, hence preventing a quorum from being present for a vote on the resignation. Cartes withdrew his bid to resign and be sworn in as a senator on 26 June 2018 after not receiving enough political support to carry through his plans.