Jump to content

Sebastián Piñera: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary
Personal life: wiki link...
Line 35: Line 35:
== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==
[[File:Pineraninez.jpg|left|thumb|Piñera family portrait.]]
[[File:Pineraninez.jpg|left|thumb|Piñera family portrait.]]
Piñera was born in [[Santiago, Chile|Santiago]] to Magdalena Echenique Rozas and José Piñera Carvallo, who worked for [[CORFO]] and was Chilean ambassador to [[Belgium]] and to the [[United Nations]]. His maternal lineage is of [[Basque people|Basque]]''<ref>{{es}} [http://pinera2010.cl/2009/12/14/chile-necesita-un-verdadero-renacimiento/ Piñera2010]</ref>'' descent and his paternal lineage is of [[Asturian people|Asturian]]''<ref>{{es}} Radiotelevisión del Principado de Asturias [http://www.rtpa.es/portal/site/rtpa/menuitem.0753e0e414e1eefd9ddbe4f3bb30a0a0/?vgnextoid=a0b376bba2666210VgnVCM10000097030a0aRCRD&vgnextchannel=4a621e54439d9010VgnVCM100000bb030a0aRCRD En Libardón todavía quedan huellas de los antepasados del nuevo presidente chileno]</ref>'' descent. He is the third child of six, with three brothers and two sisters: Guadalupe, [[José Piñera|José]] (a former Minister of Labor under [[Augusto Pinochet]]), Pablo, [[Miguel Piñera|Miguel]] (a well-known Chilean performer), and Magdalena. He is married to Cecilia Morel Montes and has four children: Magdalena, Cecilia, Sebastián and Cristóbal.
Piñera was born in [[Santiago, Chile|Santiago]] to Magdalena Echenique Rozas and José Piñera Carvallo, who worked for [[CORFO]] and was Chilean ambassador to [[Belgium]] and to the [[United Nations]]. His maternal lineage is of [[Basque people|Basque]]''<ref>{{es}} [http://pinera2010.cl/2009/12/14/chile-necesita-un-verdadero-renacimiento/ Piñera2010]</ref>'' descent and his paternal lineage is of [[Asturian people|Asturian]]''<ref>{{es}} Radiotelevisión del Principado de Asturias [http://www.rtpa.es/portal/site/rtpa/menuitem.0753e0e414e1eefd9ddbe4f3bb30a0a0/?vgnextoid=a0b376bba2666210VgnVCM10000097030a0aRCRD&vgnextchannel=4a621e54439d9010VgnVCM100000bb030a0aRCRD En Libardón todavía quedan huellas de los antepasados del nuevo presidente chileno]</ref>'' descent. He is the third child of six, with three brothers and two sisters: Guadalupe, [[José Piñera|José]] (a former Minister of Labor under [[Augusto Pinochet]]), Pablo, [[Miguel Piñera|Miguel]] (a well-known Chilean performer), and Magdalena. He is married to [[Cecilia Morel Montes]] and has four children: Magdalena, Cecilia, Sebastián and Cristóbal.


== Education ==
== Education ==

Revision as of 23:20, 17 October 2010

Sebastián Piñera
President of Chile
Assumed office
March 11, 2010
Preceded byMichelle Bachelet
Senator of Chile
In office
March 11, 1990 – March 11, 1998
Succeeded byCarlos Bombal Otaegui
President of National Renewal
In office
May 26, 2001 – March 10, 2004
Preceded byAlberto Cardemil Herrera
Succeeded bySergio Díez Urzúa
Personal details
Born (1949-12-01) December 1, 1949 (age 74)
Santiago, Chile
Political partyIndependent (2010-present)
National Renewal (1990-2010)
SpouseCecilia Morel Montes (since 1973)
ChildrenMagdalena
Cecilia
Sebastián
Cristóbal
Residence(s)Santiago, Chile
Alma materPontifical Catholic University of Chile
Harvard University
ProfessionInvestor
Businessperson
WebsiteOfficial website

Miguel Juan Sebastián Piñera Echenique, Ph.D. (Spanish pronunciation: [miˈɣel ˈxwan seβasˈtjan piˈɲeɾa etʃeˈnike]; born December 1, 1949) is the current President of Chile having won the second round of the presidential election that took place on January 17, 2010, and subsequently taking office on March 11, 2010. He is a businessman, politician, former Senator, and leader of the presidential and parliamentary electoral coalition Coalition for Change. Piñera ranks among Chile's richest persons.

Personal life

File:Pineraninez.jpg
Piñera family portrait.

Piñera was born in Santiago to Magdalena Echenique Rozas and José Piñera Carvallo, who worked for CORFO and was Chilean ambassador to Belgium and to the United Nations. His maternal lineage is of Basque[2] descent and his paternal lineage is of Asturian[3] descent. He is the third child of six, with three brothers and two sisters: Guadalupe, José (a former Minister of Labor under Augusto Pinochet), Pablo, Miguel (a well-known Chilean performer), and Magdalena. He is married to Cecilia Morel Montes and has four children: Magdalena, Cecilia, Sebastián and Cristóbal.

Education

One year after his birth, Piñera's family moved abroad to Belgium and later to New York City where his father was the Chilean ambassador to the United Nations. Piñera returned to Chile in 1955 and was enrolled in the Colegio del Verbo Divino ("Divine Word Collegiate"), from which he graduated in 1967.[4]

Piñera then matriculated at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile to undertake his undergraduate degree in Economics, from which he graduated in 1971. Upon graduation, he was awarded the Raúl Iver Oxley Prize which is given to the best overall student of each class.[5]

Piñera continued on to study at Harvard University on a partial Fulbright Program for his postgraduate studies in economics. During his time at Harvard, Piñera and a classmate co-authored an article titled, "The Old South's Stake in the Inter-Regional Movement of Slaves" for the Journal of Economic History.[6] He also worked as a teaching fellow during 1975 and 1976[citation needed]. After three years at Harvard, Piñera graduated with both a M.A. and Ph.D. in Economics. His thesis was titled, "The Economics of Education in Developing Countries."[7]

Piñera returned to Chile in 1976.

Teaching career

Once graduated, Piñera was an educator from 1971 until 1988. He was Professor of Economics at the University of Chile, the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile and Adolfo Ibáñez University. In 1971, he was professor of Economic Political Theory in the School of Economics at the University of Chile and in 1972, was a professor at the Valparaiso Business School.[8]

Foundations

In 1989, accompanied by Cecilia Morel, Danica Radic, and Paula Délano, Piñera created the Enterprising Women Foundation (Fundación Mujer Emprende), originally called The House of Youth (La Casa de la Juventud). The foundation aims to assist in the development of young women of lower-income.[9]

In 1993 Piñera created the foundation Fundación Futuro, of which he is president and whose directors are Cristián Boza D., María Teresa Chadwick P., Hugo Montes B., Cecilia Morel M., Renato Poblete S.J. and Fabio Valdés C. The head director of the foundation is Magdalena Piñera. The foundation’s mission is to help in Chile’s development of justice, freedom and democracy.[10] The foundation was renamed to Fundación Cultura y Sociedad following Piñera's presidential election win.[11]

Under the Fundación Cultura y Sociedad (formerly Fundación Futuro) the Grupo Tantauco is created with the mission of environmentalism, and is administered by Juan Carlos Urquidi. It was created to support the proposals brought forth by Piñera, which he plans to make effective during his presidency.[12] An additional project titled Grupo Tantauco: Derechos Humanos was proposed with the hope of beginning a reconciliation between the Chilean people who suffered human rights violations in Chile's past history.[13]

Businesses

Piñera owns 100% of Chilevisión, a terrestrial television channel broadcasting nationwide, and to avoid a conflict of interests, it has been recently announced it will be acquired by Time Warner[14]. Piñera also sold its 27% of LAN Airlines (LAN) in several rounds between February and March 2010[15], and holds 13% of Colo-Colo,[16] a football (soccer) club; among other minor stock positions in companies such as Quiñenco, Enersis, and Soquimich.

Piñera has built an estimated fortune of 1 billion USD as of March 2009, according to Forbes magazine.[17] His wealth is greatly due to his involvement in introducing credit cards to Chile in the late 1970s and his subsequent investments, mainly in LAN Airlines stock. Piñera acquired shares of the formerly state-owned company from Scandinavian Airlines in 1994, as part of a joint venture with the Cueto family.[17][18]

In 1982, an arrest warrant was issued against Piñera. He was accused of violating the Banking Law during his time as general manager of the Bank of Talca. Piñera spent 24 days in hiding, while his lawyers appealed the order. A writ of habeas corpus was first rejected by the Appeals Court, but then approved by the Supreme Court, acquitting Piñera.[19]

In July 2007, Piñera was fined approximately 680,000 USD by Chile's securities regulator (SVS) for not withdrawing a purchase order after allegedly received privileged information (an infraction similar to insider trading) of LAN Airlines stock in mid-2006.[20] Piñera denied any wrongdoing and asserted that the whole process was part of a political attack to damage his image. He did not appeal, stating that the court process could take years and interfere with his intention to run again for president in late 2009. Later that month, he resigned from the boards of LAN and Quintec.[21]

Political career

Piñera declared he voted No in the 1988 plebiscite on Augusto Pinochet. However, in 1989 he headed the presidential campaign of Hernán Büchi, a former finance minister of the Pinochet government. During the same election process, Piñera was elected as Senator for East Santiago (1990–1998) and soon after, joined the center-right National Renewal Party. During his term as Senator he was a member of the Senate Finance Committee.

In 1992 Piñera's attempt to become his party's candidate for the following year's Presidential election dramatically ended after he was involved in a scandal known as Piñeragate, wherein a wiretapped conversation between himself and a friend was revealed during a political television show he attended. In the conversation—made public by the television station's owner, Ricardo Claro—he conspired to have his rival for the party's nomination, Evelyn Matthei, cornered during the show by a journalist close to Piñera. The tape was then revealed to have been illegally recorded by a member of the military and given to Matthei, who then gave it to Claro. Matthei stepped down from the presidential race as well.

In 1998, Piñera opposed the arrest and detention of Augusto Pinochet, in London, initiated by Baltasar Garzón, arguing that it was an attack on the sovereignty and dignity of Chile.[22]

Piñera was president of his party from 2001 to 2004. He tried to run for Senator in 2001, but resigned his campaign after the presidential candidate of his alliance -and member of the allied party, the Independent Democrat Union (UDI)-, Joaquín Lavín made it clear he would not support candidates from Piñera's party, insisting on supporting retired Admiral Jorge Arancibia instead.

On May 14, 2005, in a surprise move Piñera announced his candidacy for the 2005 presidential election (RN was supposed to support UDI's Lavín.) He has described his political philosophy as Christian humanism. [citation needed] In the first round of the election, on December 11, he obtained 25.4% of the vote, which placed him in second place. Since no candidate achieved an absolute majority, a runoff election was held on January 15, 2006, between himself and Michelle Bachelet of the governing coalition. Bachelet won the presidency with over 53% of the vote.

Presidential Elections 2009–2010

File:Pinerafamilia.jpg
Piñera celebrates victory alongside wife and family.

Piñera ran for President of Chile in the 2009-2010 election. Since August 2009, he led in opinion polls, competing with Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle, Marco Enríquez-Ominami and Jorge Arrate; all of whom are left-of-center candidates. In the election of December 13, 2009, Piñera placed first in the results by obtaining 44.05% of the votes, while Frei placed second by obtaining 29.6% of the votes. Neither candidate received more than half of the total votes; therefore, according to the Constitution, Chileans returned to the polls for a final run-off election on Sunday, January 17, 2010.[23]

On the evening that day, the third and final preliminary results were announced by the Deputy Interior Ministry. These showing accounted for 99.77% of the total ballot boxes. Of the votes, Piñera received 51.61% and Frei received 48.39%.[24] Eduardo Frei conceded after the first preliminary results, making Sebastián Piñera the new President-elect of Chile. Further results were released by the chilean Electoral Service on January 25, 2010. Official and final results sanctioned by the Election Qualifying Court were published on the Official Gazette on February 1, 2010.

Piñera's invested an estimated 13.6 millions USD on his Presidential campaign, which included items such as a campaign anthem[25] and "Thank You" banners.[26] Piñera's banners and billboards have carried statements throughout the country such as "Delinquents, your party is over," and "Small businesses, Big opportunities".[27] Also, Piñera's campaign made a cutting-edge move for a right-wing candidate, releasing a national TV spot featuring a male gay couple, something never seen before in a presidential campaign run in Chile. Amongst his promises are increasing education rates and improving international relations with the neighboring country of Perú.[28]

Piñera's victory meant a shift towards the right,[29] breaking two-decade of center-left political leadership and becoming the first elected right-wing leader in 52 years.[30]

On January 28, Piñera renounced his political affiliation to National Renewal, becoming an independent. Within the party bylaws, it is stipulated that members who are elected to the presidency must renounce their association in order to govern the country fairly, foremost with the interest of the people, not with the interest of a political party or particular political philosophy.[31]

President-elect

Sebastián Piñera and his Council of Ministers in Chile's National Historical Museum.
Piñera with the Brazilian president, Lula da Silva.

Private to public transition

Template:S Piñera cabinet infobox Piñera became the first billionaire to be sworn into the Chilean Presidency.[32] He offered to sell his shares in major corporations before being sworn in on March 11, 2010, in order to avoid conflicts of interest. Piñera has placed 400 million USD in blind trusts. [33]

The Monday following Piñera's election, expectations of sale from his largest holdings created a surge in trade of Axxion and LAN shares, causing three brief suspensions (January 19–20, 22, 2010) in the Santiago Stock Exchange in order to ease trade. Axxion shares more than tripled before falling 39% on Friday, January 22.[34] Bachelet's Finance Minister Andrés Velasco urged Piñera to get the sale "sorted out quickly."[35] The value of Piñera's interest in Axxion was estimated at 700 million dollars USD, of his 1.2 billion dollar USD fortune at the beginning of that week[36].

On February 5, Piñera confirmed plans to sell his 26.3% stake in LAN airlines at an extraordinary shareholders' meeting for his main holding company, Axxion. Under the pact, Axxion shareholders have agreed to fix the price of the sale, estimated at 1.5 billion USD. The Cueto family, who at that point held 25.5% of LAN through their holding company Costa Verde Aeronáutica, had the first option to purchase the stake.[37] On February 18, Axxion posted a statement on their website confirming the sale of a 21.18% stake in LAN Airlines to the Cueto family for 1.23 billion USD. Announcement regarding the sale of the remaining shares was pending until March 2010, when the whole package left Piñera's hands.[38]

Piñera sold his 9.7% stake in the upscale private hospital Clinica Las Condes at a price of 25,113 CLP per share (48.00 USD) through his holding company Bancard on Tuesday, February 16. The total sale of the 792,000 shares grossed 37.85 million USD and was purchased by the brokerage firm Celfin.[39] The proceeds from the sale will go to paying off Bancard debt.[40]

Piñera announced on February he had the intention to transfer 100% of his stake in Chilevisión to a non-for-profit organization called Fundación Cultura y Sociedad (formerly Fundación Futuro), of which he is owner.[41] The foundation's board will include some of the station's current executives. Under that proposal, Piñera maintains the right to remove and replace the foundation's president at any given time.[42] Cristián Larroulet, current Minister of the Secretariat of the Presidency of Chile, stated that Piñera was honouring his promise of removing himself from private corporations, as Chilevision will become the property of a non-profit organization. MP Cristián Monckeberg (RN), stated there is no law obligating Piñera to do otherwise and thus this decision is legally legitimate.[41]. The option above finally did not took place, Piñera decided to sell the TV station, and after a failed attempt in May 2010 with the Linzor Capital investment fund[43], the President announced it sold Chilevisión to Time Warner, in late August 2010.

Piñera said he won't sell his 12.5% stake in Blanco y Negro, company that owns the nation's popular soccer team Colo-Colo. He has stated, "We want big things and not only achieve local victories. The idea is to return the Copa Libertadores to Chile. That is our great goal."[44] Although he will remain part owner, he will take no administrative duties or role while President.[45]

Council of Ministers

Piñera announced what he calls his "cabinet of unity" on Tuesday, February 9, 2010, at 18:00 hours (local time), in Chile's National Historical Museum. The list of names was presented the previous day to the leader of the National Renewal Party, Carlos Larraín, and the leader of the Independent Democratic Union, Juan Antonio Coloma. The cabinet is made up of 16 men and 6 women, with an average age of 49. Amongst Piñera's nominees is Jaime Ravinet, who is defense minister of the current president's cabinet and a former member of the Christian Democratic Party, from which he resigned upon accepting Piñera's cabinet offer. Also a nominee is Cristián Larroulet, who was an economic planning adviser under Pinochet.[46]

During his first official meeting with his Council of Ministers on Wednesday, February 10, Piñera issued a formal memorandum calling upon all members to renounce their positions in all private companies by the 28th of February in order to avoid conflicts of interest. The memorandum also said that in regards to national heritage, secretaries of state whose affiliation with companies having direct receipt of fiscal monies must either remove themselves from those associations or honor the restrictions of their competitors.[47] Ten of his 22 ministers have involvement in companies with significant financial means.

Presidency

Piñera was sworn in as the 35th President of the Republic of Chile on March 11, 2010, in a ceremony held in a plenary session of the National Congress in Valparaíso. In the same ceremony, Piñera's Cabinet ministers were sworn in. The ceremony was also marked by a 6.9 Mw earthquake and subsequent aftershocks that upset the invitees. Shortly after, the National Congress building was evacuated due to a tsunami alert that proved to be false a couple of hours later. On October 12, 2010, Piñera rallied his countrymen in the rescue of 33 trapped miners, all of whom were rescued after 70 days following a mining accident. "Chile will never be the same," he said to the miner's foreman, Luis Urzúa, as he (the last of the miners to emerge from the cavern) greeted Piñera, in a broadcast carried live across the globe. Despite much goodwill in Chile following this many Chileans are still waiting on Piñera to rectify anti-terrorism laws in Chile which effectively mean the indigenous Mapuche people can be dealt with as "terrorists." This matter has led to hunger strikes which started before the mining disaster, and are set to continue afterwards.[48]

References

  1. ^ The World's Billionaires: #437, Sebastián Piñera. Forbes, 2010.
  2. ^ Template:Es Piñera2010
  3. ^ Template:Es Radiotelevisión del Principado de Asturias En Libardón todavía quedan huellas de los antepasados del nuevo presidente chileno
  4. ^ Template:Es Universia Sebastián Piñera Perfil
  5. ^ Template:Es icon "Caminos cruzados", El Mercurio.
  6. ^ Kotlikoff, Laurence J.; Piñera, Sebastián (1977), "The Old South's Stake in the Inter-Regional Movement of Slaves, 1850-1860", Journal of Economic History, 37 (2): 434–450 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |lastauthoramp= ignored (|name-list-style= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Template:Es icon Sandoval, Roberto Castillo (July 30, 2009), "La tesis doctoral de Sebastián Piñera", Noticias secretas
  8. ^ Template:Es icon "Sebastián Piñera Echeñique - Senador", Reseñas parlamentarias - Biblioteca del Congreso Nacional de Chile
  9. ^ Template:Es Fundacion Mujer Emprende Quienes Somos
  10. ^ Template:Es Fundanción Futuro Quienes Somos
  11. ^ Template:Es Terra Semana clave para fundación a la que Piñera traspasará propiedad de Chilevisión
  12. ^ Template:Es Piñera2010 Conoce las propuestas medioambientales del Grupo Tantauco
  13. ^ Template:Es Piñera2010 Grupo Tantauco: Derechos Humanos
  14. ^ http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/cd5079e8-b07a-11df-8c04-00144feabdc0,s01=1.html
  15. ^ "UPDATE 4-Chile's Pinera to sell remaining LAN stake". Reuters. March 24, 2010.
  16. ^ Template:Es icon "Piñera aumenta participación en Colo Colo", La Nación, August 21, 2007
  17. ^ a b "#701 Sebastian Pinera", Forbes: The World's Billionaires, March 11, 2009
  18. ^ "LAN Airlines 2007 annual report, p. 29" .
  19. ^ La Nacion: Inversionista en Fuga
  20. ^ Ethisphere Magazine: Insider Trading
  21. ^ Template:Es icon "Piñera deja el directorio de Lan y su socio Cueto inicia apelación por multa de SVS", La Nación, August 1, 2007
  22. ^ Piñera y su acalorado apoyo a Pinochet en 1998. La Nación, 10 de diciembre de 2009 (part of the speech can be seen at Youtube).
  23. ^ Moffett, Matt (December 14, 2009), "Billionaire Leads Chile Election", Wall Street Journal
  24. ^ Template:Es icon Republica de Chile Votación Candidatos por País
  25. ^ Piñera's Campaign Anthem
  26. ^ Piñera's Thank you Banners
  27. ^ Piñera Campaign Billboard
  28. ^ Living in Peru: Chilean candidate Piñera says he'll maintain good relations with Peru if elected
  29. ^ Gardner, Simon (December 9, 2009), "Chile right seen ousting left in first since Pinochet", Reuters
  30. ^ PBS Newshour Chile Elects First Right-Wing President in 52 Years
  31. ^ Template:Es El Economista http://eleconomista.com.mx/internacional/2010/01/28/pinera-renuncia-su-militancia-gobernar Piñera renuncia a su militancia para gobernar
  32. ^ Rohter, Larry (January 15, 2006), "Chile Is Ready to Elect a President Unlike Any Other", New York Times
  33. ^ Reuters UPDATE 1-Chile's Piñera begins LAN stake sale process
  34. ^ The Wall Street Journal Chile Piñera's Axxion Falls 39% After Trading Resumes
  35. ^ Bloomberg Business Week Axxion Falls After Post-Election Surge as Halt Lifted (Update2)
  36. ^ Canada.com Chile's billionaire new president profits from share surge
  37. ^ Reuters Piñera's Axxion approves LAN stake sale
  38. ^ Reuters UPDATE 2-Chile's Pinera offers Cuetos $1.23 bln LAN stake
  39. ^ Template:Es La Universal Piñera vende acciones de clínica en Chile
  40. ^ Bloomberg Pinera to Auction 36 million USD Las Condes Stake (Update1)
  41. ^ a b Template:Es La Nacion Cuestionan fórmula de fundación para Chilevisión
  42. ^ Template:Es Radio Bio Bio Ex “Fundación Futuro” cambia de función y queda como dueña de las acciones de Chilevisión
  43. ^ "Chilean President Pinera sells TV station". Reuters. May 15, 2010.
  44. ^ El Economista Colo-Colo, la pasión de Piñera
  45. ^ Template:Es El Diario Exterior El presidente empresario
  46. ^ Financial Times Chile’s Piñera unveils ‘cabinet of unity’
  47. ^ Template:Es Europa Press Piñera pide a sus futuros ministros renunciar a sus cargos en empresas antes del 28 de febrero
  48. ^ Mapuche hunger strike in Chile highlights the real problem facing President Sebastián Piñera
Political offices
Preceded by President of Chile
2010–present
Incumbent

Template:Persondata