Armando Villanueva

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Armando Villanueva Del Campo
Armando Villanueva del Campo.jpg
Prime Minister of Peru
In office
17 May 1988 – 15 May 1989
President Alan García
Preceded by Guillermo Larco Cox
Succeeded by Luis Alberto Sánchez
Minister of the Presidency
In office
13 May 1988 – 15 May 1989
President Alan García
Preceded by Guillermo Larco Cox
Succeeded by Luis Alberto Sánchez
Minister of the Interior
In office
2 March 1989 – 15 May 1989
President Alan García
Preceded by Juan Soria Díaz
Succeeded by Agustín Mantilla
Member of the Senate
In office
26 July 1985 – 5 April 1992
President of the Senate
In office
26 July 1987 – 26 July 1988
Preceded by Luis Alberto Sánchez
Succeeded by Ramiro Prialé
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
In office
26 July 1986 – 26 July 1987
Preceded by Luis Alberto Sánchez
Succeeded by Ramiro Prialé
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
28 July 1963 – 3 October 1968
Constituency Lima
Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
28 July 1967 – 28 July 1968
Preceded by Antonio Monsalve Morante
Succeeded by Andrés Townsend
Personal details
Born (1915-11-25)25 November 1915
Lima, Peru
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Lima, Peru
Political party Peruvian Aprista Party
Spouse(s) Lucy Villanueva
Residence Santiago de Surco District, Lima, Peru
Religion Roman Catholic

Armando Villanueva Del Campo (25 November 1915 – 14 April 2013) was the leader of the Peruvian American Popular Revolutionary Alliance.[1] Born in Lima, his parents were Pedro Villanueva Urquijo, a gynecologist in the city, and Carmen Rosa Portal del Campo. His only legitimate sibling was his older brother Ing. Pedro Villanueva del Campo Portal.

At the age of 15 Villanueva became a member of APRA's Juventud Aprista Peruana in opposition to the military dictatorship of Luis Miguel Sánchez Cerro. At the age of 18 he was imprisoned in El Frontón prison (located on the small island of San Lorenzo off the coast of Callao, Lima's main port) for his subversive activities in Peru. He was a political ally and personal friend of Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, the founder and most prominent leader of the APRA party.

Villanueva spent most of his early life in different prisons for his political activities. In 1940, along with other APRA political activists, Villanueva was exiled to Chile. Between the 1940s and 1960s Villanueva would spend his time in between Peruvian prisons and deportations to Chile and Argentina. While living in Santiago he met and married Lucia Ortega. They had a daughter: Lucia del Pilar Villanueva Ortega.

In late 1961, before a general amnesty was granted to members of APRA, Villanueva entered Peru clandestinely. He needed to start organizing the multiple party cells in preparation for their return to full political activities. Afraid that he would caught, he sought refuge at his cousin's house in San Isidro. Ana Maria Villanueva de Riva-Vercellotti was married to an Italian, and Armando was convinced that Peru's secret police would never find him there. He was able to stay there, unperturbed, till full amnesty was granted.

From 1963 to 1968 Villanueva served as a deputy in the lower house of the Peruvian legislature representing Lima, serving as President of the House of Deputies from 1966 to 1967. Villanueva led the Aprista opposition to the military government of Juan Velasco.

The death of Haya de la Torre in 1979 propelled Villanueva to the leadership of the APRA party. As leader of the party Villanueva ran for the Presidency in 1980 resulting in a second place loss to the Popular Action party candidate Fernando Belaúnde. It is said that he lost the elections because the opposition mounted a negative campaign against him, claiming that he was married to a Chilean-born citizen. Chile's victory in the Guerra del Pacifico in 1883, which resulted in Peru losing a large chunk of its southern border to Chile, is still a subject of bad feeling in Peru.

In 1985 Villanueva was elected to the Peruvian Senate and given the position of President of the Senate. During the Presidency of Alan García, he served as Prime Minister from 1988 to 1989. In 1990 Villanueva was elected to his last term in the Senate, from 1990 to 1992.

Villanueva retired in 2005, at the age of 90, to dedicate the rest of his life to his family and writing. In May 2005, with the death of his cousin Ana Maria, he also assumed the title of family patriarch. He died on 14 April 2013 at the age of 97.[2]

References

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  2. [1]
Preceded by Partido Aprista presidential candidate
1980 – (Lost)
Succeeded by
Alan García
Preceded by Leader of the Peruvian Aprista Party
1979-1985
Succeeded by
Alan García

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