Germán Martínez

Germán Martínez Cázares (born June 20, 1967 in Quiroga, Michoacán) is a Mexican politician and lawyer. He was a member of the National Action Party.

Martínez Cázares holds a degree in law from the Universidad La Salle. Has a Specialty in Constitutional Law and Political Sciences from the Center for Political and Constitutional Studies (Madrid). Pursued Doctoral Studies in Constitutional Law at the Universidad Complutense. He has given lectures on law and politics at Harvard University and various Mexican universities. Has also taught law at the Universidad Anáhuac.

His career

  • Federal Deputy during the 57th Session (1997–2000), where he was President of the Population Commission and member of COCOPA.
  • Federal Deputy during the 59th Session (2003–2006) where he was Assistant Coordinator for the National Action Party Parliamentary Group, member of the Commissions for Constitutional Points and Culture and the Committee for the Center for Legal Studies and Parliamentary Research and the Group of Friendship between Mexico and Spain.
  • Within the National Action Party, he has been a member of the National Executive Committee, Secretary of Party Studies and Director General of the Rafael Preciado Hernández Foundation.
  • He has written for several publications, include the El Economista newspaper and a weekly journal called Proceso. He has coauthored a selection of texts on Carlos Castillo Peraza, published by Fondo de Cultura Económica.
  • He represented the National Action Party in the General Council of the Federal Electoral Institute in the 2000 and 2006 electoral processes.
  • Member of president elect Felipe Calderón's transition team.
  • 2007: Elected as the 19th party president. He resigned on July 6, 2009 because of the electoral defeat of his party in the 2009 Mexican elections.
  • Legal director before the Consejo General del Instituto Federal Electoral (Federal Election Commission).
  • December 3, 2018: General Director of the Mexican Social Security Institute.[1] On May 21, 2019, Martínez Cázares resigned, complaining of a lack of resources and blaming it on the austerity budget of the Department of Treasury (Hacienda).[2] On May 22, he requested to be reinstated in the Senate.[3]
gollark: Old phones have built-in long-duration battery backups, very low power draw, integrated screens for status monitoring, processors generally as good as or better as Raspberry Pis, and decently fast cellular modems.
gollark: I don't see why you would need *two* UPSes for two things.
gollark: Why spend money on expensive UPSes when you could run your servers on old phones?
gollark: My important stuff is replicated to my laptop, which is *relatively* portable.
gollark: USB sticks are quite easy to lose, and not hugely reliable.

See also

References

  1. "Lic. Germán Martínez Cázares" (in Spanish). Gobierno de Mexico: IMSS. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  2. "Renuncia Germán Martínez a la dirección del IMSS; ve motivos" [Germán Martínez resigns management of the IMSS; see reasons] (in Spanish). Uno TV. May 21, 2019. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  3. "Exdirector del IMSS solicita reincorporarse al Senado" [Exdirector of the IMSS requests rejoining the Senate], Excelsior (in Spanish), Mexico City, May 22, 2019, retrieved May 22, 2019
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.