Hugo Fernández Faingold

Hugo Fernández Faingold (born 1 March 1947) is a Uruguayan political figure, who served as Vice President of Uruguay.[1]

Hugo Fernández Faingold.

Background

Fernández Faingold belongs to the Uruguayan Colorado Party.[2] He is son of historian and Colorado Party (Uruguay) trade unionist Hugo Fernández Artucio and Julia Faingold.[3]

He was married with Ana Maria Renna Valdez, and they have 6 children, he divorced in 2003. After he married with Veronica Cortavarria they have 2 children. Actually, He is married to Analia Barrientos.

Political career

Dyuring the first presidency of Julio Maria Sanguinetti he served as Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare.[4] He later served as Vice President of Uruguay from 1998–2000, in the second Administration of President Julio Maria Sanguinetti, succeeding Hugo Batalla, who died in office.

Historical note

Fernández was the twelfth person to hold the office of Vice President of Uruguay. The office dates from 1934, when Alfredo Navarro became Uruguay's first Vice President.

Subsequent events

Fernández Faingold was himself succeeded as Vice President by Luis Antonio Hierro López in 2000.

He subsequently served as Uruguayan Ambassador to the United States from 2000 to 2005.

gollark: ++magic py await bot.user.set_nickname("LyricLy®")
gollark: NO EVIDENCE of actual implementation (except maybe the parser)NO COHERENT SPEC describing how any if it actually worksLANGUAGES WERE NOT MEANT TO HAVE TYPES BE TRAITS OR WHATEVERWanted to use macros anyway for a laugh? We had a tool for that. It was called Lisp."Hello I would like impl<u8(a)> T(a) apples please" - statements made by the utterly Deranged.And after all the computers and compiler tooling we gave them!
gollark: And yet.
gollark: Well, the lesson is more that LyricLy's language ideas are bad and impossible.
gollark: *You* thought of then made Macron?

See also

References

  1. Publications, Europa; Staff, Europa Publications (2000). The Europa world year book, 2000. Taylor & Francis. p. 3958. ISBN 978-1-85743-077-6. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  2. Archived 2017-02-14 at the Wayback Machine INTRAPARTY AND INTERPARTY POLITICS: FACTIONS, FRACTIONS, PARTIES, AND COALITIONS IN URUGUAY (1985-1999) David Altman Iberoamericana. Nordic Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies Vol. XXXIV: 1-2 2005, pp.
  3. Exile from Argentina: a Jewish family and the military dictatorship (1976-1983) By Eduardo D. Faingold
  4. Think Tanks and Public Policies in Latin America Edited by Adolfo Garcé and Gerardo Uña
Political offices
Preceded by
Hugo Batalla
Vice President of Uruguay
October 3, 1998 – March 1, 2000
Succeeded by
Luis Antonio Hierro López
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Alvaro Diez de Medina
Uruguayan Ambassador to the United States
May 2000 - July 2005
Succeeded by
Carlos Gianelli


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