Jorge Santini Padilla | |
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Jorge Santini (left) during his third term as mayor of San Juan. |
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Mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico | |
In office January 2, 2001 – Incumbent |
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Preceded by | Sila Calderon |
Personal details | |
Born | March 11, 1960 San Juan, Puerto Rico |
Political party | New Progressive Party |
Spouse(s) | Irma Garriga |
Children | 3 |
Alma mater | University of Puerto Rico (BA) Inter American University (JD) |
Profession | Politician, attorney. |
Jorge Santini Padilla (born March 11, 1960) in San Juan, Puerto Rico) is an Puerto Rican Politician and current Mayor of San Juan City.[1]
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Santini is the third son of Nicolás Santini and Ivonne Padilla. He has three brothers and studied in the public school system of Puerto Rico until graduation in 1978. In 1975, he joined the United States Marine Air Cadet Corps, and later the National Guard, holding the rank of Colonel in the Puerto Rico State Guard. His Military Occupational Specialty is 27A (or Judge Advocate). Santini received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Puerto Rico in 1982 and studied law at IAU Law School until 1987 where he obtained a Juris Doctor (J.D.) cum laude degree. In 1986, he became a partner at the law firm of Miranda Cárdenas & Córdova where he specialized in medical malpractice suits. Santini married Irma Garriga on August 23, 1986 and they have three children: Odette (b. 1987), Jorge Andrés (b. 1996), and Amanda (b. 2003).
Santini was admitted to practice law at the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and the Supreme Court of the United States. In 1994, he started serving as Legal Advisor to Governor of Puerto Rico Pedro Rosselló until 1996. That same year, Santini was elected to the Senate of Puerto Rico representing the San Juan senatorial district. He then served as Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Santini entered the race for Mayor of San Juan in 1999 and challenged Senate President Charlie Rodriguez in an NPP primary. Rodríguez had been the choice of the party leadership, but Santini prevailed in the primary. He went on to defeat Popular Democratic Party candidate Eduardo Bhatia in the 2000 elections and sought reelection in 2004 defeating Bhatia for a second time.
In his 6th year as Mayor of San Juan, Santini began inaugurating major projects such as the 28 million dollar world-class Natatorium swimming pool and diving complex, the San Juan Golf Academy, a sports-oriented magnet school and a bilingual municipal magnet school. He also created San Juan's Ronald Reagan Autism-Specialized Day Care Center. In 2007, Santini was rumored to be a possible candidate for Governor of Puerto Rico in the event that NPP president and former Governor Pedro Rosselló chose not run against then Resident Commissioner Luis Fortuño in 2008. However, Rosselló announced on April 28, 2007 that he would seek the NPP nomination for Governor. Santini then announced on May 13, 2007 that he would seek a third term as Mayor of San Juan in the 2008 elections. He ran unopposed within the NPP and faced PDP Rep. Ferdinand Pérez in the 2008 general elections. During the NPP primary process for the 2008 general election, Santini's candidate for Governor, Dr. Pedro Rosselló was overwhelmingly rolled-over in a landslide by Luis Fortuño. However his other candidates Kimmey Rashke, Albita Rivera, Jorge Navarro, Nuno Lopez and Liza Fernandez were elected to conform his San Juan legislative team.
Fortuño went on to win the general election by a landslide. In the 2008 Puerto Rican general election, Santini defeated Ferdinand Pérez (PPD) and Luis Piñero (PIP) for his third term as mayor. He is the longest running popularly-elected Mayor of the city. He is now proposing a light-rail extension of the heavy-rail Tren Urbano into Old San Juan. On July 20, 2009, Gov. Fortuño will sign legislation backed by Mayor Santini classifying San Juan as a "local education authority", enabling Santini's administration to access federal education funds directly. He is credited with attracting a talented cabinet, including former Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Executive Director Miguel Cordero and former Government Development Bank of Puerto Rico President Lourdes Rovira as Vice Mayor, Police Colonel Adalberto Mercado and Sports and Recreation Director Maria Elena Batista. Doña Felisa was the longest mayor service in San Juan to 1946 to 1969 not elected by the people's vote.
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