Carlos A. Madrazo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rockero (talk | contribs) at 10:24, 6 March 2006 (New Article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Carlos Alberto Madrazo Becerra (July 7, 1915June 4, 1969) was a Mexican reformist politician.

Madrazo was born on the ranchería of Parrilla, Tabasco state, Mexico, to Píoquinto Madrazo López, a businessman, and Concepción Becerra, a schoolteacher. His childhood was marked by poverty, but his mother taught him the will to overcome adversity. He was an avid learner, studying at the José N. Rovirosa Intitute, where his oratory skills led to his being selected to give a speech on Benito Juárez on the hero's birthday. Tabasco governor Ausencio Conrado Cruz and Tomás Garrido Canabal, president of the pro-Calles Central Resistance League, both present as the event, were impressed with his eloquence. Following the event, Garrido Canabal invited Madrazo on his statewide speaking tours, where he became known as "the young tribune".

Madrazo received a scholarship from the state government of Tabasco and studied at Juárez University where he organized the Confederation of Southeastern Socialist Students (Confederación de Estudiantes Socialistas del Sureste), which also drew support from peasants and labor. He also wrote for the newspaper Rendición.

He moved to Mexico City to continue his studies at the National Preparatory School, and in 1937 represented the Society of National Preparatory School Students as their president at the Second Congress of Mexican Socialist Students in Uruapan, Michoacán. In the same year, he earned his law degree from the National Autonomous University and joined the Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM, later renamed PRI), becoming its president from 1938 – 1939. He also presided over the Confederation of Mexican Youth. In 1942 he was appointed General Director of Social Action of the Mexican Federal District (DF) and in 1944 became Director of the National School of Archivists and Librarians.

In 1943 he became a federal deputy of the second electoral district of the DF, but as a supporter of Javier Rojo Gómez, who aspired to succeed President Manuel Ávila Camacho, he was targeted by Rojo Gómez's rivals, who implicated him in a scheme to disperse fraudulent Bracero Program cards to would-be migrants. As a result, he was imprisoned.

In 1952 Madrazo was named Chief of the Legal Departament of the Sugarcane Comission. In 1954 he wrote Anécdotas de Personajes Famosos ("Anecdotes of Famous People"). He represented the state government of Tabasco in Mexico City, and supported Adolfo López Mateos' bid for the presidency, campaigning on his behalf. When López Mateos arrived in Tabasco, he proposed the development of the Southeast of Mexico as a possibility for the country's prime source of income.

On April 20, 1958, Madrazo took the oath of candidacy for the office of Governor of Tabasco, and was elected in 1959. His governorship saw public improvements such as 100 kilometers of roadway and the opening of hundreds of schools and hospitals in addition to private developments such as milk rehydration and pasteurization plants and the industrialization of the cacao industry at Cárdenas.

Following his governorship, Madrazo returned to the presidency of the PRI, but the party was much different than in the Calles or even the Cárdenas years. He tried to institute such reforms as open primaries for local offices, the appointment of university students to prominent party positions, and the institution of a "Commission of Honor" to investigate and punish political corruption. These proposals lay bare the empty nature of Mexican "democracy" and won earned him enemies within the PRI, and in 1965 he was forced to resign his leadership of the party.

He returned to his position as the head of the national librarian school and died four years later in a plane crash on Pico del Fraile Hill in Monterrey, Nuevo León, with his wife Graciela Pintado.

Bibliography

  • La verdad en el "caso" de los braceros: origen de esta injusticia: nombre de los verdaderos responsables, ca. 1945. México.
  • Anécdotas de Personajes Famosos, 1952. Mexico.
  • Madrazo: voz postrera de la revolución; discursos y comentarios. Compiled by L. Darío Vasconcelos, 1971. Mexico, B. Costa-Amic.

External links

Preceded by Governor of Tabasco
19591964
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
19641965
Succeeded by