Carlos María Abascal Carranza
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Carlos María Abascal Carranza (b. Mexico City, June 14, 1949) is a Mexican lawyer and the Secretary of the Interior in the cabinet of Vicente Fox. He is the son of the writer Salvador Abascal, famous for his synarchist ideas.
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[edit] Professional career and Education
Carlos Abascal studied law at Mexico City's Escuela Libre de Derecho, graduating in 1973 with a thesis entitled "Relations between Spiritual Power and Temporal Power", in which he stated, inter alia, that "democracy is a farce that has been used by Freemasons in Mexico... to make a confused and disoriented majority believe that its will is being done". [1] He later pursued business management studies at the IPADE. For about thirty years he worked for Afianzadora Insurgentes where he began as messenger and trainee in the legal area and ended as Director and CEO. He retired from Afianzadora Insurgentes in August 2000.
Abascal has occupied different positions in private and social organizations. He has been president of the Fundación para el Desarrollo Sostenible en México (FUNDES), president of Vertebra, president of the Movimiento Social y de Administración de Valores (AVAL), vice-president of the Instituto Mexicano de Doctrina Social Cristiana (IMDOSOC), and president of the Confederación Patronal de la República Mexicana (COPARMEX).
[edit] Executive Cabinet
Abascal was one of President Vicente Fox's key cabinet members. In 2000 Fox appointed Abascal as Secretary of Labor[1]. In 2005, following Santiago Creel's resignation, Abascal was appointed Secretary of the Interior.[2]
[edit] Controversy
As a conservative member of Fox's cabinet, he has been involved in a number of controversies because of his Catholic beliefs. He is opposed to some birth control methods such as abortion and the contraceptive pill[3]. He has spoken out against "liberal" literature, including the novel Aura by Carlos Fuentes[4], which Abascal judged as inappropriate for his daughter and demanded that her private school remove it from its curriculum, as well as fire the literature teacher.[5]
Preceded by Santiago Creel |
Secretary of the Interior 2005—2006 |
Succeeded by Francisco Javier Ramírez Acuña |
Preceded by Mariano Palacios |
Secretary of Labor 2000—2005 |
Succeeded by Francisco Javier Salazar |
[edit] References
- ^ Labor After the PRI Multinational Monitor magazine, March 2001
- ^ President Vicente Fox names Carlos Abascal Carranza to Replace Aantiago Creel at interior secretariat, findarticles entry here
- ^ Mexico's Catholic Church raises voice in 2006 race Link is t to WorldWide Religious News, but report is by Reuters
- ^ The Latin master The Guardian, May 5 2001
- ^ Mexican Labor News and Analysis Vol 6, No. 5