Clara López Obregón

Clara Eugenia López Obregón (born April 12, 1950) is a Colombian politician who was the Minister for Employment. She also served as Acting Mayor of Bogotá from 2011 to 2012. A Harvard-trained economist,[1] she was the Alternative Democratic Pole's nominee for President of Colombia in the 2014 election.[2][3]

Clara Eugenia López Obregón
Lopez in 2011
Minister of Labour of Colombia
In office
25 April 2016 (2016-04-25)  5 May 2017 (2017-05-05)
Appointed byJuan Manuel Santos Calderón
Preceded byLuis Eduardo Garzón
Acting Mayor of Bogotá
In office
8 June 2011 (2011-06-08)  1 January 2012 (2012-01-01)
Appointed byJuan Manuel Santos Calderón
Preceded bySamuel Moreno Rojas
Succeeded byGustavo Petro Urrego
6th Auditor General of Colombia
In office
1 April 2003 (2003-04-01)  1 April 2005 (2005-04-01)
Nominated bySupreme Court of Justice
Appointed byCouncil of State
Preceded byCésar Augusto López Botero
Succeeded byPiedad Amparo Zúñiga Quintero
Personal details
Born (1950-04-12) 12 April 1950
Bogotá, D.C., Colombia
NationalityColombian
Political partyAlternative Democratic Pole (2005—present)
Other political
affiliations
Spouse(s)
    Edmond Jacques Courtois Miller
    (
    m. 19801983)
      Carlos Arturo Romero Jiménez
      (
      m. 1985)
      Alma mater
      ProfessionEconomist, lawyer

      López is also a University of Los Andes-trained lawyer with a doctorate from the University of Salamanca, and served as the 6th Auditor General of Colombia from 2003 to 2005.

      Personal life

      López was born on 12 April 1950 in Bogotá, Colombia to Álvaro López Holguín (grandson of Alfonso López Pumarejo) and Cecilia Obregón Rocha.[4] (cousin of painter Alejandro Obregón Roses) [5] She attended Colegio Nueva Granada in Bogotá,[5] but was later sent to live in McLean, Virginia in the United States, where she attended the Madeira School, a prestigious preparatory boarding school for girls.[5] After graduating high school in 1968, she attended Harvard University where she became an active participant in the student movement opposed to United States involvement in the Vietnam War. She graduated with an A.B. magna cum laude in June 1972.[5]

      She was married on 13 September 1980 in Tenjo, Cundinamarca to Edmond Jacques Courtois Miller,[6] a wealthy Canadian banker whom she met while in Harvard, but they later divorced after Courtois was charged and pleaded guilty to insider trading charges in New York in 1983, having peddled confidential takeover information while a Vice President at Morgan Stanley's mergers and acquisitions department from 1974 to 1977.[7] She later remarried to Carlos Romero Jiménez, whom she met while they both served in the Bogotá City Council. She has no children.

      gollark: Counting attacks from someone who already controls the environment the code is running in is kind of pointless when considering RCEoR and most stuff.
      gollark: Okay, sure.
      gollark: I mean, patch the code of the thing you are installing.
      gollark: Well, sure. But in that case you could also just patch the code to not sandbox it like that.
      gollark: That's very much useless for the majority of cases, except really weird ones.

      References

      1. "Clara Lopez | Profile". Colombia News | Colombia Reports. 1 April 2017. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
      2. "FACTBOX-Candidates in Colombia's presidential election". Reuters. 26 May 2014. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
      3. "Clara Eugenia López Obregón, Colombia, Ministra de Trabajo (2016-) y candidata presidencial (2014)". www.cidob.org. 2014.
      4. Restrepo Sáenz, José María; Rivas, Raimundo; Restrepo Posada, José, eds. (1995). Genealogías de Santa Fe de Bogotá (in Spanish) (4 ed.). Bogotá: Editorial Presencia. p. 390. OCLC 28546996. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
      5. Vengoechea, Alejandra de. "Clara López: La mujer rebelde". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Bogotá. ISSN 0121-9987. OCLC 28894254. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
      6. "Bogotá Social". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Bogotá (24.143): 10E. 12 September 1980. ISSN 0121-9987. OCLC 28894254.
      7. "Courtois faces U.S. conspiracy charges". The Gazette. Montreal: 30. 5 February 1981. ISSN 0384-1294. OCLC 456824368. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
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