Manuel Gómez Morín
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manuel Gómez Morín (February 27, 1897- April 19, 1972) was a Mexican politician. He was a founding member of the National Action Party, and its leading theoretician. Prior to this he was considered a leading figure in Mexican monetary policy, one of the so-called Siete Sabios de México (Seven Sages of Mexico).
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Morín was born in the old mining town of Batopilas in the Mexican state of Chihuahua on February 27, 1897. His father Manuel Gómez Castillo (of Spanish origin) died at age 24, shortly after his son was born. His mother, Concepción Morín de Avellano, was a native of Parral, Chihuahua.
His widowed mother sold their small home and moved to Parral around 1911, from there they moved to the city of Chihuahua. Later, looking for a better place for her son, she moved to León, Guanajuato, there, in a Sacred Heart school, Manuel finished his primary school studies. His first years of preparatory school in the María Inmaculada school, founded by the bishop of León, Don Emeterio Valverde y Téllez.
By 1913, mother and child left León and moved to Mexico City where Manuel entered the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria and finished high school.
From 1915 to 1919 he worked from correcting tests to writing editorials in revolutionary papers to help his family. He worked in the Secretaría de Hacienda from 1919 to 1921.
He married Lidia Torres Fuentes in 1924, with whom he procreated 4 children: Juan Manuel, Gabriela, Mauricio and Margarita.
He died on April 19, 1972 in Mexico City. He rests in Mexico City's Rotonda de los Personajes Ilustres.
[edit] Professional Studies
Morín studied Law during the days of the Mexican Revolution in the National University of Mexico, and there, as a student, he struggled to gain autonomy to the university to which he served as Rector in 1933. He received the degree of Lawyer in 1918, aged 21, he taught Political Law and Contitutional Law in the University. In 1934 he received a Honoris Causa doctorate from the UNAM.
[edit] Professional career
He began practicing his career as a lawyer two years before graduating, and after he graduated he started his own office which he carried out in the same building until his death. With the exception of a few years he laboured in the Secretary of Finance and as rector of the UNAM, he always lived as a lawyer and in 1927 he was legal representative to the Soviet Embassy.
[edit] Civil Service Career
As a public servant, he occupied the post of Under-secretary of Finance, President of the Board of the Banco de México, member of the organizing commission of BANOBRAS and collaborated in the first Commission on Studies about Social Security.
He worked in the Board of the Banco de México from 1925 to 1929. He created the First Law on Agricultural Credit. He had an important role in the creation of the Constitutive Law of the Bank of Mexico, Insurance institutions and organic laws of articles 27 and 28 of the Mexican Constitution.
[edit] Politics
[edit] Founding of the National Action Party
On September 15, 1939, Morín founded the National Action Party of Mexico along with Luis Calderón Vega, and served as party president from 1939 to 1949. The National Action Party won the presidential elections for the first time in the year 2000, 61 years after its foundation.
[edit] "National Action" politics
The National Action Party was built on a theory of National Action politics, rejecting a fundamental adherence to right or left, which was largely developed by Gómez Morín himself.
The party ideology, at least in principle, is that of "National Action" which rejects a fundamental adherence to left- or right-wing politics or policies, instead requiring the adoption of such policies as correspond to the problems faced by the nation at any given moment. Thus both right and left wing policies may be considered equally carefully in formulation of national policy. (This is a similar theoretical basis as both Gaullism and Peronism, although the similarity is weakened in the later case by the distinctly authoritarian stance of Perón.)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Preceded by none |
President of the National Action Party 1939–1949 |
Succeeded by Juan Gutiérrez Lascurain |
Preceded by Roberto Medellín |
Rector of the UNAM 1933–1934 |
Succeeded by Fernando Ocaranza |