Vice President of Honduras
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Honduras |
Executive |
Legislative |
Judiciary |
|
Foreign relations |
Politics portal |
The Vice Presidents of Honduras, also known as Presidential Designates, officially the Designates to the Presidency (Spanish: Designados a la Presidencia) is the second highest political position in Honduras. According to the current constitution, the President and Vice-Presidents are elected in the same ticket. From 1957 to 2006 and from 2010 to present there are positions of first, second, and third Vice-President known as designados presidenciales, literally Presidential Designates.
Only during the Zelaya administration the Vice-Presidential position was held by one person, since the Congress reformed the Constitution on 2008 for that the Vice-Presidential charge would be held again by 3 persons. The position of "Vice President Commissioner" was created by former President Manuel Zelaya after Vice President Elvin Santos resigned in late 2008.[1]
A history of officeholders follows.[2]
1895-1954
Term | Vice President | Notes |
---|---|---|
1895–1899 | Manuel Bonilla | [3] |
1899–1903 | José María Reina | |
1903–1907 | Miguel R. Dávila | [3] |
1908 | Máximo B. Rosales | [4] |
1908–1911 | Dionysius Gutiérrez | [4] |
1912–1913 | Francisco Bertrand | [3] |
1913–1915 | Nazario Soriano | [5] |
1916–1919 | Alberto Membreño Vásquez | [5] |
1920–1924 | José María Ochoa | [6] |
1925–1929 | Presentación Quezada | [7] |
1929–1933 | Rafael Díaz Chávez | |
1933–1949 | Abraham Williams Calderón | [8] |
1949–1954 | Julio Lozano Díaz | [9] |
1957-1972(Military Era)
Term | President | First Presidential Designate | Second Presidential Designate | Third Presidential Designate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1957–1963 | Ramon Villeda Morales | José Mejía Arellano | Francisco Milla Bermúdez | Juan Miguel Mejía | [10] |
1965–1971 | Oswaldo López Arellano | Ricardo Zúñiga Agustinus | Horacio Moya Posas | Napoleón Alcerro Oliva | [11] |
1971–1972 | Ramón Ernesto Cruz Uclés | René Bendaña Meza | Eugenio Matute Canizales | Tiburcio Carías Castillo | [12] |
Constitutional Vice Presidents (1982- )
Presidential Designates (1982–2006)
Term | President | First Presidential Designate | Second Presidential Designate | Third Presidential Designate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982–1986 | Roberto Suazo Cordova | Marcelino Ponce Martínez | Céleo Arias Moncada | Arturo Rendón Pineda | [13] |
1986–1990 | José Azcona del Hoyo | Alfredo Fortín | José Pineda Gómez | Jaime Rosenthal | Rosenthal left office in 1989[14] |
1990–1994 | Rafael Leonardo Callejas | Jacobo Hernández Cruz | Marco Tulio Cruz | Roberto Martínez Lozano | [15] |
1994–1998 | Carlos Roberto Reina | Walter López Reyes | Juan de la Cruz Avelar Leiva | Guadalupe Jerezano Mejía | Jerezano left office in 1997[16] |
1998–2002 | Carlos Roberto Flores | William Handal Raudales | Gladys Caballero de Arévalo | Hector Vidal Cerrato Hernandez | [17] |
2002–2006 | Ricardo Maduro | Vicente Williams Agasse | Armida Villela de López Contreras | José Alberto Díaz Lobo | |
Vice-President and Presidential Commissioner (2006–2010)
On 2005, the Honduran Congress reformed the Constitution for that the charge of Vice-President may be held by only one person.
Term | President | Vice President | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2006–2009 | Manuel Zelaya | Elvin Santos (27 January 2006 - 18 November 2008[18])
|
Elvin Santos resigned.
|
2009–2010 | Roberto Micheletti | Unoccupied (28 June 2009 - 27 January 2010) | President Roberto Micheletti didn't appoint any Presidential Commissioner (like Manuel Zelaya did with Aristides Mejía) while he was occupying the Honduran Presidency. |
Presidential Designates (2010- )
On 2008, before the Honduran Primary Elections, the Honduran National Congress reformed the Constitution again so that the Vice-Presidential office may be occupied by 3 persons as it has been before.
Term | President | First Presidential Designate | Second Presidential Designate | Third Presidential Designate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–2014 | Porfirio Lobo Sosa | María Antonieta Guillén Vásquez | Samuel Armando Reyes Rendon | Victor Hugo Barnica | |
2014–2018 | Juan Orlando Hernández | Ricardo Antonio Alvarez Arias | Ana Rossana Guevara Pinto | Lorena Enriqueta Herrera Estevez | |
References
- ↑ http://www.hondurasembassy.se/paginas-ing/honduras.html
- ↑ Short history of Vicepresidency
- 1 2 3
- 1 2
- 1 2
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Elvin Santos renuncia a la Vicepresidencia (in spanish)
- ↑
- ↑ Honduras: Impugnan cargo de Arístides por violentar preceptos constitucionales (in spanish)
- ↑ Fiscalía investiga nombramiento de Arístides Mejía se determinará si la Presidencia violentó o no preceptos constitucionales (in spanish)
|