Rudy Sablan

Rudolph Guerrero Sablan (November 13, 1931 – July 24, 1995) was a Guamanian politician and member of the Democratic Party of Guam. Sablan served as the second Lieutenant Governor of Guam from 1975 until 1979 under Governor Ricardo Bordallo.[1][2]

Rudy Sablan
Lieutenant Governor of Guam
In office
January 6, 1975 (1975-01-06)  January 1, 1979 (1979-01-01)
GovernorRicardo Bordallo
Preceded byKurt Moylan
Succeeded byJoseph F. Ada
Personal details
Born
Rudolph Guerrero Sablan

(1931-11-13)November 13, 1931
Agana, Guam
DiedJuly 24, 1995(1995-07-24) (aged 63)
United States
Political partyDemocratic Party of Guam
Spouse(s)
Esperanza Cruz San Nicolas
(
m. 1960; his death 1995)
Children2
Alma materLoyola University of Los Angeles

Biography

Early life and education

Sablan was born in Agana, Guam, which is now known as Hagåtña. He graduated from Father Dueñas Memorial School in 1950 as the valedictorian of his class.[1] Sablan received his bachelor's degree in political science from the former Loyola University of Los Angeles, which is now part of Loyola Marymount University.[1] He was hired by a Navy Public Works Center after college before enlisting in the United States Army.[1] Sablan, who was based in Hawaii, served as a U.S. Army intelligence analyst and area studies specialist as part of the Army Psychological Warfare Unit.[1] He returned to Guam after an honorable discharge.[1]

Career

Civil service

Once he had returned to Guam, Sablan took a job within the territorial government. He was quickly promoted to administrative positions within government agencies, including the Director of Labor and Personnel by 1961.[1] His work caught the attention of Governor Manuel F.L. Guerrero, who appointed Sablan as both assistant Secretary of Guam and executive assistant to the Governor during the 1960s.[1] The appointments allowed Sablan to oversee much of Guam's executive branch.[1]

Political career

In 1974, Governor Carlos Camacho, a Republican and the first elected Governor of Guam, sought re-election for a second term, together with his Lt. Governor Kurt Moylan.[2] Four Democrats declared their intention to challenge Camacho, including Ricardo Bordallo, former Gov. Manuel Flores Leon Guerrero (who teamed with David D.L. Flores as his running mate for Lt. Governor); Pedro C. Sanchez, the former President of University of Guam (who teamed with Esteban U. Torres), and Joaquin C. "Kin" Arriola (teamed with school principal, Ted S. Nelson).[3] On the Republican side, a rival team, Senator Paul McDonald Calvo with running mate Tony Palomo, challenged Governor Camacho for the GOP nomination.[3]

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ricardo Bordallo chose Rudy Sablan as his running mate for Lt. Governor.[3] The Bordallo-Sablan team won the 1974 Democratic primary election, defeating the three other candidates. Governor Carlos Camacho won the Republican nomination, beating the Calvo-Palomo ticket, but badly dividing Guam's Republican Party.[3][2] The Republican split worked to the Democrat's advantage, allowing Bordallo to defeat Governor Camacho in the November gubernatorial election.[2]

Governor Bordallo and Lt. Governor Rudy Sablan were sworn into office on January 6, 1975. Sablan became the second elected Lt. Governor in Guam's history. However, Bordallo and Sablan frequent, public spats and disagreements on policy issues plagued the Bordallo-Sablan administration throughout their four-year term.[3] The political relationship between the Governor and Lt. Governor broke down by the 1978 general election. In 1978, Rudy Sablan ran against Governor Bordallo in the gubernatorial election.[3] Sablan chose Jose L. "Joe" Leon Guerrero as his running mate for Lt. Governor, while Governor Bordallo replaced Sablan with Dr. Pedro C. Sanchez, a historian and educator, on his ticket.[2][3] Governor Bordallo defeated Sablan in the 1978 Democratic primary, taking 34.2% while Sablan-Guerrero placed second with 25% of the vote.[3] Ricardo Bordallo ultimately lost his re-election bid to Republican Paul McDonald Calvo in November 1978.[2][3]

Four years later, Sablan once again announced his candidacy for Governor of Guam in the 1982 gubernatorial election. Sablan again picked his Joe Leon Guerrero, as his running mate for Lt. Governor (Sablan and Guerrero had also run on the same ticket in 1978).[3] However, the Sablan-Guerrero lost a rematch in Democratic primary to Ricardo Bordallo and his new running mate, Edward Diego Reyes.[3] Bordallo defeated Sablan by 35 percentage points in the Democratic primary to win the nomination.[3] Bordallo, in a second political rematch from 1978, then beat Governor Paul McDonald Calvo in the November 1982 general election.[3] (Calvo had previously ousted Bordallo from office in 1978).[2][3]

Later career and life

Governor Ricky Bordallo appointed Sablan as a member of Commission on Self-Determination, which oversaw the future relationship between Guam and the United States, from 1983 until 1987.[1] Sablan remained a proponent the Guam Commonwealth Act, even after the end of the Bordallo-Reyes administration in 1987. In December 1989, Sablan testified in support of the Guam Commonwealth Act at the sole U.S. congressional hearing on the Act, which was held in Honolulu.[1]

In 1983, Sablan was appointed Chairman of the board of directors of the Guam Airport Authority, a territorial government agency which operates the island's international airport (now known as Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport).[1] Under Sablan, the airport's terminals and runways were modernized and expanded to encourage a growing tourism industry.[1]

Sablan worked to reconcile the various, often infighting, factions of the Democratic Party of Guam by 1993.[1] He endorsed the 1994 gubernatorial campaign of Governor Carl Gutierrez and Lt. Gov. Madeleine Bordallo and has been credited with helping the Gutierrez-Bordallo team win the 1994 general election.[1]

Sablan became an integral advisor to the new Gutierrez administration. Governor Carl Gutierrez appointed Sablan to the Commission on Self-Determination from 1994 until his death in 1995. (Sablan had previously served on the Commission from 1983 to 1987 under Governor Ricky Bordallo).[1] In 1994 and 1995, Gutierrez appointed Sablan as part of a team who represented Guam at the Base Reuse and Realignment Commission hearings in San Francisco, California.[1]

Sablan died on July 24, 1995 (equivalent to the early morning of July 25, Guam time) at the age of 63.[1] He was survived by his wife, Esperanza "Ancha" Cruz San Nicolas; their two children, Rudy and Essie; and three grandchildren, Marie Antoinette, Jessica, and Mario.[1]

gollark: iPlants are available for $5.99/month per iPlant.
gollark: iHoe, 500% more efficient than typical hoes, but only if you use iPlants.
gollark: Their naming scheme is beginning to break down though. "Xs Max"?
gollark: They're a few years behind the times, but with buzzwords, brand naming, and shininess.
gollark: Of course they did; 'tis Apple.

References

  1. Underwood, Robert (1995-08-02). "Tribute to the Late Lt. Governor Rudolph Guerrero Sablan". Congressional Record. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
  2. Quinata, Nicholas Y.; Murphy, Shannon J. (2016-08-01). "Governor Ricardo J. Bordallo biography". Guampedia. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
  3. Rogers, Roger F. (April 1995). "Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam (page 250–271)". Destiny's Landfall: A History of Guam (Google Books). Retrieved 2016-08-01.
Party political offices
Preceded by
Richard F. Taitano
Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Guam
1974
Succeeded by
Pedro C. Sanchez
Political offices
Preceded by
Kurt Moylan
Lieutenant Governor of Guam
1975–1979
Succeeded by
Joseph Franklin Ada
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