Miguel Otero Lathrop

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Preceded byLuis Maira
Succeeded byAdolfo Zaldívar
Preceded byJaime Guzmán
Miguel Otero
Otero in 2010
Ambassador of Chile to Argentina
In office
20 April 2010  8 June 2010
PresidentSebastian Piñera
Preceded byLuis Maira
Succeeded byAdolfo Zaldívar
Member of the Senate of Chile
In office
10 April 1991  11 March 1998
Preceded byJaime Guzmán
Succeeded byJovino Novoa
Constituency7th Circumscription
Personal details
Born(1930-07-09)9 July 1930
Died1 March 2025(2025-03-01) (aged 94)
PartyLiberal Party
(1955–1966)
National Party
(1966–1973)
National Renewal
(1987–2025)
SpousePatricia Alvarado
ChildrenFour
Parent(s)Jorge Otero
María Lathrop
Alma mater
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionLawyer

Jorge Miguel Otero Lathrop (9 July 1930 – 1 March 2025) was a Chilean politician and diplomat who served as senator and ambassador.[1][2][3][4]

During the 1990s, he served as a senator for seven years. Later, during the first government of Sebastián Piñera, he briefly held the position of Chilean ambassador to Argentina.

Otero was born to José Antonio Otero Bañados, a lawyer, and María Lathrop Zavala. He studied at Saint George's College, Santiago and later enrolled in the Military School of Libertador Bernardo O'Higgins, where he reached the rank of infantry officer in 1947.

He later abandoned his military career to study Law at the University of Chile, where he graduated in 1955. His thesis was titled De los Tribunales, del Ministerio Público y de la Defensoría General de Carabineros.

In 1956, he traveled to the United States with a scholarship from the Law Institute of the Americas to study at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. In 1957, he obtained a Master in Comparative law, graduating Cum laude.

Political career

Early political involvement

Otero's political involvement began during his university years, where he served as Vice President of the Law Student Center, faculty delegate to the University of Chile Student Federation, and National University Councilor.

He was a member of the Liberal Party, and after its dissolution in 1966, he joined the National Party.

After the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, he distanced himself from active politics, only returning in the late 1980s, when he joined National Renewal. He later became Vice President of the party (1988–1992).

Senator and ambassador

In the 1989 parliamentary elections, Otero ran for a Senate seat in Santiago Metropolitan Region (District 7) but was unsuccessful. However, following the assassination of Jaime Guzmán, he was appointed his replacement in April 1991.

In 2010, he was appointed Chilean ambassador to Argentina by President Sebastián Piñera.[5][6] However, his tenure lasted only 50 days due to controversy over an interview with the Argentine newspaper Clarín, in which he justified the 1973 coup that overthrew socialist president Salvador Allende. The backlash led to his resignation.[7]

Academic and professional career

Since 1961, Otero was a professor of procedural law at the University of Chile, where he became a full professor in 2000. He also taught at the Police Science Academy from 1986 onward.

Personal life

Otero was married to Patricia Alvarado Moore, with whom he had four children.

Death

Otero died at the age of 94[8] in Santiago, Chile.[citation needed]

Electoral history

References

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