Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo

Excelentísimo Señor
Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo
The Marquis of the Ría of Ribadeo

GE
Prime Minister of Spain
In office
25 February 1981  1 December 1982
Monarch Juan Carlos I
Deputy Rodolfo Martín Villa
Juan Antonio García Díez
Preceded by Adolfo Suárez
Succeeded by Felipe González
Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain
In office
9 September 1980  25 February 1981
Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez
Preceded by Fernando Abril Martorell
Succeeded by Juan Antonio García Díez
Minister of Economy
In office
9 September 1980  25 February 1981
Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez
Preceded by Fernando Abril Martorell
Succeeded by José Luis Leal Maldonado
Minister for Relations with the European Communities
In office
25 February 1978  9 September 1980
Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez
Preceded by Office created
Succeeded by Eduardo Punset
Minister of Public Works
In office
4 July 1976  April 1977
Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez
Preceded by Antonio Valdés
Succeeded by Luis Ortiz González
Minister of Commerce
In office
13 December 1975  6 July 1976
Prime Minister Carlos Arias Navarro
Preceded by José Luis Cerón Ayuso
Succeeded by José Lladó
Personal details
Born Leopoldo Ramón Pedro Calvo-Sotelo y Bustelo
(1926-04-14)14 April 1926
Madrid, Spain
Died 3 May 2008(2008-05-03) (aged 82)
Pozuelo de Alarcón, Spain
Resting place Ribadeo Cemetery, Galicia, Spain
Nationality Spanish
Political party FET y de las JONS
(1954-1977)
Union of the Democratic Centre
(1977-1983)
Spouse(s) María del Pilar Ibáñez-Martín Mellado
Children Leopoldo (b. 1957)
Juan (b. 1958)
María del Pilar (b. 1959)
Pedro (b. 1960)
Víctor María (b. 1961)
José María (b. 1964)
Andrés (b. 1965)
Pablo (b. 1965)
Religion Roman Catholicism
This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Calvo-Sotelo and the second or maternal family name is Bustelo.

Leopoldo Ramón Pedro Calvo-Sotelo y Bustelo, 1st Marquis of the Ría of Ribadeo, GE (Spanish pronunciation: [leoˈpoldo ˈkalβosoˈtelo i βusˈtelo]; 14 April 1926 – 3 May 2008), known as Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo was Prime Minister of Spain between 1981 and 1982.

Biography

Childhood

Calvo-Sotelo was born into a prominent political family in Madrid on 14 April 1926 with his father Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo [1] as the writer and his mother Mercedes Bustelo Márquez.[2] His uncle José Calvo Sotelo was the finance minister under Miguel Primo de Rivera.[2] Calvo-Sotelo graduated as a civil engineer from the School of Civil Engineers of Madrid now part of the Technical University of Madrid, working in the area of applications of chemistry to the industry.[2]

He was the president of RENFE (Spanish national railroad network) between 1967 and 1968. Calvo-Sotelo was elected solicitor (Deputy) of Franco's Cortes, representing industrialists in the Union of Chemical Industries, in 1971.[2] A monarchist, Sotelo was one of the founders of an association of politicians, mostly of Rightists and Center Rightists, which disguised as the Fedisa publishing firm helped Spain's peaceful transition into democracy.[2]

Political career

Calvo-Sotelo was designated Minister of Commerce by Carlos Arias Navarro to be in the first government of the Monarchy (December 1975 – July 1976).[2] He advocated total destruction of Franco's ideals instead of mere superficial changes that politicians like Navarro planned.[2] Calvo-Sotelo was kept in the cabinet of Adolfo Suárez upon his succession to premiership in 1976 and directed several centre-right and centre-left political associations into one party, the Union of the Democratic Centre (UCD).[2] The UCD won in both the June 1977 and the March 1979 elections[2] and Calvo-Sotelo was elected MP for Madrid.

President of the Government of Spain

Suárez decided to keep him in the Cabinet, first from 1978 to 1980 as Minister for Relations of the European Economic Community, then as Second Vicepresident in charge of economic affairs.[2] After the resignation of Suárez on 29 January 1981, he was supposed to be appointed president (Presidente del Gobierno) on 23 February, and advocated Spain's proposed entry into NATO as soon as possible.[2] However, on that date a session of the Congress of Deputies was interrupted by the attempted coup of 23-F.[2] After the failed coup, his appointment as Prime Minister was confirmed on 25 February by the vote of all the UCD members of the congress and 21 others as well, giving him a majority of 186 to 158.[2] Splits in the UCD group led to the formation of three rival parties, the Democratic Action Party (Partido de Acción Democrática/PAD), which soon merged with the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), the Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) and Democratic Popular Party (PDP), resulting in the UCD being unable to count on sufficient support in the legislature. Fresh elections were called, resulting in a heavy defeat for the UCD, which won only 12 seats at the 1982 election compared to 168 in 1979. He served as president until 1 December 1982 and was succeeded by the socialist Felipe González.[2]

Later years

In 2002, Calvo-Sotelo was raised into the Spanish nobility by King Juan Carlos of Spain and given the hereditary title of Marqués de la Ría de Ribadeo (Marquis of the Ría of Ribadeo), together with the dignity Grande de España (English: Grandee of Spain), this in honor for his service.[3][4]

Calvo-Sotelo was also a member of the Club of Madrid[5] and of the Spanish Royal Academy of Engineering.

He died of cardiac arrest at his home in Pozuelo de Alarcón, on 3 May 2008.

Personal life

He was married to María del Pilar Ibáñez-Martín y Mellado and had eight children:


Bibliography

References

Media related to Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo at Wikimedia Commons

Political offices
Preceded by
Adolfo Suárez

Prime Minister of Spain

1981–1982
Succeeded by
Felipe González
Spanish nobility
New creation Marquis of the Ría of Ribadeo
2002–2008
Succeeded by
Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo e Ibáñez-Martín
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