- Lopez Michelsen, Alfonso
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▪ 2008Colombian politicianborn June 30, 1913, Bogotá, Colom.died July 11, 2007, Bogotáwon election in 1974 as president of the country in a landslide victory for the centrist Liberal Party and took immediate steps to curb inflation and raise taxes on high incomes. The elimination of price subsidies and a rise in unemployment, however, led to a surge in labour unrest, land seizures by peasants, and guerrilla activity, and in 1975 López Michelsen declared a state of siege. By the end of his term in 1978, the López Michelsen government was being accused of corruption involving the illegal-drug trade and of taking repressive measures to deal with a wave of political violence. He stood again in the 1982 presidential election but lost to Conservative candidate Belisario Betancur. López Michelsen was the son of Alfonso López Pumarejo, who twice served (1934–48 and 1942–45) as president of Colombia. After leaving politics López Michelsen was a political analyst for El Tiempo newspaper and was often called upon as an unofficial mediator for the government in conflicts involving various Colombian armed factions.
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▪ president of Colombiaborn June 30, 1913, Bogotá, Colom.died July 11, 2007, BogotáColombian politician, who was president of Colombia (1974–78).López Michelsen was the son of Alfonso López Pumarejo, who was twice president of Colombia (1934–38 and 1942–45). He was educated in Bogotá, Paris, London, and Brussels, with postgraduate studies at Georgetown University and the University of Chile. Returning to Colombia from voluntary exile in Mexico in 1958, he organized a new party of dissident Liberals, the Liberal Revolutionary Movement (MRL), to oppose the National Front. The National Front was a coalition of Liberals and Conservatives established in 1957 to end a decade of violent civil strife. The pact between the two major established parties had guaranteed the peaceful alternation of presidential terms between them but also, in López Michelsen's opinion, stifled any real political competition and leadership.López Michelsen ran unsuccessfully for president in 1962 but gained a seat in the Senate, to which he was reelected in 1966. In 1967 he led the MRL back into the Liberal Party and was appointed governor of the new department of César by President Carlos Lleras Restrepo. In August 1968 he became minister of foreign relations, in which capacity he formed closer cultural and commercial ties with the Soviet Union and worked for better relations with other Latin American countries. With the termination in 1974 of the National Front agreement to alternate national elective offices, López Michelsen was elected president in a landslide victory in the first competitive presidential election in Colombia in 16 years. On taking office, he took steps to curb inflation and raised taxes on high incomes, but the elimination of price subsidies and a rise in unemployment led to a surge in labour unrest, land seizures by peasants, and guerrilla activity. In 1975 López Michelsen declared a state of siege. By the end of his term, the government was being accused of corruption involving the illegal-drug trade and of taking repressive measures to deal with a wave of political violence. López Michelsen lost the 1982 presidential election to the Conservative candidate. He subsequently wrote a column for the newspaper El Tiempo and was noted for his efforts to mediate conflicts in Colombia.* * *
Universalium. 2010.