Luis Nardín Rivas

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Preceded byHumberto Muñoz Cornejo
Succeeded byFederico Gutiérrez Granier
Preceded byHumberto Frías
Succeeded byEduardo Sáenz García
Luis Nardín Rivas
Luis Nardín in exile.

Mayor of La Paz
In office
2 May 1942  3 May 1943
Preceded byHumberto Muñoz Cornejo
Succeeded byFederico Gutiérrez Granier
In office
2 February 1948  4 March 1950
Preceded byHumberto Frías
Succeeded byEduardo Sáenz García

Minister of National Economy
In office
10 April 1950  5 May 1951
PresidentMamerto Urriolagoitía
Preceded byEgberto Ergueta Quiroga
Succeeded byJuan Manuel Crespo Lugo
Personal details
Born(1900-12-19)December 19, 1900
Died(1961-07-13)July 13, 1961
SpouseMercedes Ergueta
Children3
Parent(s)Julio Nardín
María Rivas

Luis Nardín Rivas (19 December 1900 – 13 July 1961) was a Bolivian politician who served as Mayor of La Paz twice; (1942–1943) and (1948–1950).[1][2] He was a prominent politician during the final stages of the oligarchic Republic of Bolivia and an ally of the old elite. After his second term ended, he would become Minister of National Economy (1950–1951), and would briefly work as a diplomat in the Bolivian delegation to Brazil in 1951.[3][4] After the Bolivian National Revolution of 1952, he was exiled to Peru where he spent the rest of his life.[5]

He was born in La Paz, on December 19, 1900, the son of Julio Nardín and María Manuela Rivas. He was educated at the University of San Francisco Xavier in Sucre where he made several connections which would later help his political career.

His political career began with his entry to the Chamber of Deputies in 1920. This was the same year that president José Gutiérrez Guerra was ousted by a civilian-led coup that Nardín Rivas supported.[6] During his time in the Chamber of Deputies, he largely sided with the Saavedrista government and opposed the military socialist governments of Germán Busch and Gualberto Villarroel.[7] Later, when the oligarchy returned to power during the "sexenio" (1946–1952), he was a staunch ally and supporter of the government. President Enrique Peñaranda would appoint Nardín Mayor of La Paz in 1942.

Major political figure

It was during the "sexenio" that Nardín's career was seriously propelled to new heights. Having left the Chamber of Deputies in 1942, he rejoined once Villarroel was toppled and was a strong advocate of the development of the infrastructure of La Paz. He continued a project which he started in 1941, which called for the expansion and construction of new neighborhoods in La Paz in order to better deal with the rapid growth of the city's population.[8][9]

He was elected to a second term in 1948 as Mayor of La Paz and would continue his efforts to expand La Paz and modernizing the city. However, the unstable government of Enrique Hertzog would lead to the outbreak of a so-called civil war in 1949, which damaged large parts of the city. He would be important in the efforts to repair the city.

Minister of National Economy and downfall

Family

References

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