This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Mujica and the second or maternal family name is Cordano .
José Alberto "Pepe" Mujica Cordano (Spanish pronunciation: [xoˈse muˈxika] ; born 20 May
1935) has been President of Uruguay since 2010. A former urban guerrilla fighter with the
Tupamaros and a member of the Broad Front coalition of left-wing parties, Mujica was Minister
of Livestock, Agriculture, and Fisheries from 2005 to 2008 and a Senator afterwards. As the
candidate of the Broad Front, he won the 2009 presidential election and took office as President
on 1 March 2010.
He has been described as "the world's 'humblest' president", due to his austere lifestyle and his
donation of around 90 percent of his $12,000 (£7,500) monthly salary to charities that benefit
poor people and small entrepreneurs. [3][4]
Early life
Mujica was born on 20 May 1935, to Demetrio Mujica, of Spanish Basque ancestry, [5][6] and
Lucy Cordano, a daughter of Italian immigrants. Mujica's father was a small farmer who went
bankrupt shortly before his death in 1940, when his son was five. His mother's parents were
very poor immigrants from Liguria. Lucy Cordano was born in Carmelo, where her parents had
bought five acres in Colonia Estrella to cultivate vineyards . Between the ages of 13 and 17,
Mujica cycled for several clubs in different categories. He was also active in the National Party ,
where he became close to Enrique Erro.
Guerrilla leader
See also: Tupamaros
In the mid-1960s, he joined the newly formed MLN- Tupamaros movement, an armed political
group inspired by the Cuban Revolution. [7] He participated in the brief 1969 takeover of Pando ,
a town close to Montevideo , leading one of six squads assaulting strategic points in the city.
Mujica's team was charged with taking over the telephone exchange and was the only one to
complete the operation without any mishaps. [8] In March of 1970 Mujica was gunned down
while resisting arrest at a Montevideo bar; he injured two policeman and was in turn shot six
times. The surgeon on call at the hospital was secretly a Tupamaro and thus ensured his life
was saved. [9] At the time the president of Uruguay was the controversial Jorge Pacheco Areco ,
who had suspended certain constitutional guarantees in response to MLN and Communist
unrest. [10][11]
In total Mujica was captured by the authorities on four occasions. He was among the more
than 100 Tupamaros who escaped Punta Carretas Prison in September of 1971 by digging a
tunnel from inside the prison that opened up at the living room of a nearby home. [12] Mujica
was re-captured less than a month after escaping, but escaped Punta Carretas once more in
April of 1972. On that occasion he and about a dozen other escapees fled riding improvised
wheeled planks down the tunnel dug by Tupamaros from outside the prison. [13] He was re-
apprehended for the last time in 1972, unable to resist arrest. In the months that followed the
country underwent the military coup in 1973 . In the meantime, Mujica and eight other
Tupamaros were especially chosen to remain under military custody and in squalid conditions.
In all, he spent 13 years in captivity. During the 1970s and 1980s, this included being confined
to the bottom of an old, emptied horse-watering trough for more than two years. [14] During his
time in prison, Mujica suffered a number of health crises, particularly mental issues. Although
his two closest cellmates, Eleuterio Fernández Huidobro and Mauricio Rosencof often managed
to communicate with each other, they rarely managed to bring Mujica into the conversation.
According to Mujica himself, at the time he was suffering from auditory hallucinations and related forms of paranoia. [15]
In 1985, when constitutional democracy was restored, Mujica was freed under an amnesty law that covered political and related military crimes
committed since 1962. [16]
Several years after the restoration of democracy, Mujica and many Tupamaros joined other left-wing organizations to create the Movement of Popular
Participation, [17] a political party that was accepted within the Broad Front coalition.
In the 1994 general elections , Mujica was elected deputy and in the elections of 1999 he was elected senator. Due in part to Mujica's charisma, the
MPP continued to grow in popularity and votes, and by 2004, it had become the largest of any faction within the Broad Front . In the elections of that
year, Mujica was re-elected to the Senate, and the MPP obtained over 300,000 votes, thus consolidating its position as the top political force within the
coalition and a major force behind the victory of presidential candidate Tabaré Vázquez .
Minister of Agriculture
On 1 March 2005, President Tabaré Vázquez designated Mujica as the Minister of Livestock, Agriculture and Fisheries (Mujica's own professional
background was in the agricultural sector). Upon becoming minister, Mujica resigned his position as senator. He held this position until a cabinet
change in 2008, when he resigned and was replaced by Ernesto Agazzi . Mujica then returned to his seat in the Senate.
Political positions
Mujica's political ideology has evolved over the years from orthodox to pragmatist. In recent times
he has expressed a desire for a more flexible political left. [18] His speaking style and manner is
credited as part of his growing popularity since the late 1990s, especially among rural and poor
sectors of the population. [19] He has been variously described as an "antipolitician" [20] and a man
who "speaks the language of the people" while also receiving criticism for untimely or inappropriate
remarks. [21] Unlike president Vázquez, who vetoed a bill put forward by parliament that would make
abortions legal, Mujica has stated that should it come before him in the future, he would not veto
such a bill. [22] In the sphere of international relations, he hopes to further negotiations and
agreements between the European Union and the regional trade bloc Mercosur , of which Uruguay is
a founding member. [23]
On the Uruguay River pulp mill dispute between Argentina and Uruguay, Mujica was more
conciliatory toward the Argentine government than the previous administration, and in 2010, the two nations ended their long-running dispute signed
an agreement detailing an environmentally monitoring plan of the river and setting up a binational commission. Good personal relations between
Mujica and Argentinian counterpart Cristina Kirchner helped lead to the accord, although several bilateral issues remain unresolved, including the
dredging of the shared Martin Garcia access channel of Río de la Plata (River Plate). [24][25]
Asked about Brazilian President Lula da Silva 's decision to receive Mahmoud Ahmadinejad , he answered it was a "genius move" because "The more
Iran is fenced in, the worse it will be for the rest of the world." [26][27]
Presidential candidate
Even though President Vázquez favored his Finance Minister Danilo Astori as presidential candidate of the then unified Broad Front to succeed him in
2010, Mujica's broad appeal and growing support within the party posed a challenge to the president. On 14 December 2008, The Extraordinary
Congress "Zelmar Michelini" (a party convention) proclaimed Mujica as the official candidate of the Broad Front for primary elections of 2009, but
four more precandidates were allowed to participate, including Astori. On 28 June 2009, Mujica won the primary elections becoming the presidential
candidate of the Broad Front for the 2009 general election. After that, Astori agreed to be his running mate. Their campaign was centered on the
concept of continuing and deepening the policies of the highly popular administration of Vázquez, using the slogan “Un gobierno honrado, un país de
primera" (An honest government, a first-class country) – indirectly referencing cases of administrative corruption within the former government of the
major opposition candidate, conservative Luis Alberto Lacalle . During the campaign, Mujica distanced himself from the governing style of presidents
like Hugo Chávez ( Venezuela ) or Evo Morales ( Bolivia ), claiming the center-left governments of Brazilian Luis Inácio Lula da Silva or Chilean socialist
Michelle Bachelet as regional examples upon which he would model his administration. Known for his informal style of dress, Mujica donned a suit
(without a tie) for some stops in the presidential campaign, notably during visits to regional heads of state. [28]
In October 2009, Mujica won a plurality of over 48 percent of the votes compared to 30 percent for former president Lacalle, falling short of the
majority required by the constitution, while at the same time renewing the Broad Front's parliamentary majority for the next legislature (2010–2015).
A runoff was then held on 29 November to determine the winner; on 30 November Mujica emerged as the victor, with more than 52% of the vote over
Lacalle's 43%. [29] In his first speech as president-elect before a crowd of supporters, Mujica acknowledged his political adversaries and called for
unity, stating that there would be no winners or losers ( "Ni vencidos, ni vencedores" ). He added that "it is a mistake to think that power comes from
above, when it comes from within the hearts of the masses (...) it has taken me a lifetime to learn this". [30]
Government
Mujica formed a cabinet made up of politicians from the different sectors of the Broad Front, conceding the economics area to aides of his vice
president Danilo Astori. The expectations were high, as Mujica is the first former guerrilla fighter to become President in Uruguay.
In June 2012, his government made a move to legalize state-controlled sales of marijuana in Uruguay in order to fight drug-related crimes and health
issues, and stated that they would ask global leaders to do the same. [31][32] Mujica said that by regulating Uruguay's estimated $40 million-a-year
marijuana business, the state will take it away from drug traffickers, and weaken the drug cartels. The state would also be able to keep track of all
marijuana consumers in the country, and provide treatment to the most serious abusers, much like that which is done with alcoholics. [33]
In September 2013, Mujica addressed the United Nations General Assembly , with a very long discourse devoted to humanity and globalization. [34]
The speech called on the international community to strengthen efforts to preserve the planet for future generations and highlighted the power of the
financial systems and the impact of economic fallout on ordinary people. He urged a return to simplicity, with lives founded on human relationships,
love, friendship, adventure, solidarity and family, instead of lives shackled to the economy and the markets. [35]
Personal life
In 2005, Mujica married Lucía Topolansky , a fellow Tupamaro member and current senator, after many
years of co-habitation. They have no children and live on an austere farm in the outskirts of Montevideo
where they cultivate chrysanthemums for sale, having declined to live in the opulent presidential palace or
use its staff. [36] His humble lifestyle is reflected by his choice of an aging Volkswagen Beetle as
transport. [37] His wife owns the farm they live on. Some Uruguayans see him as "a roly-poly former
guerrilla who grows flowers on a small farm and swears by vegetarianism". [3][38][39][40][41][42] He
describes himself as atheist. [1]
International relevance
During the last months of 2013, the renowned Serbian film director Emir Kusturica started shooting a
documentary film on the life of Mujica, whom he considers "the last hero of politics". [43]