Juan Carlos Navarro (politician)

For the professional basketball player, see Juan Carlos Navarro (basketball).
Juan Carlos Navarro
Mayor of Panama City
In office
1999–2009
Preceded by Mayin Correa
Succeeded by Bosco Vallarino
Personal details
Born 19 October 1961
Panama City, Panama
Political party Democratic Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s) Cuqui Campagnani
Children 3
Alma mater Dartmouth College
Harvard University
Religion Roman Catholicism
Website juancarlosnavarro.com

Juan Carlos Navarro (born October 19, 1961) is a Panamanian businessman, environmentalist, and politician and was the Mayor of Panama City, Panama until June 30, 2009.

Juan Carlos Navarro received his B.A. from Dartmouth College (1983) and a Master in Public Policy from Harvard University (1985). Navarro is fluent in Spanish, French and English.

Environmentalist life

Juan Carlos Navarro is widely regarded as one of Panama’s most prominent national figures. He founded the National Association for the Conservation of Nature (ANCON), Panama’s leading non-profit environmental NGO, in 1985 and established it as the top independent environmental group in Panama and one of the most important in Latin America. Navarro served as the first Environmental Ambassador of his country, appointed by the President of Panama to advice key officials, in both the public and private sectors, on national and international environmental policy on an ad honorem basis (1995-2000). PRD

He was elected to the World Conservation Union (IUCN) as Regional Councilor for Latin America in 1990, and was re-elected to that post in 1994, serving as the first Panamanian and the youngest member ever elected to the Council. Selected in 1998 as the first Inter American Conservation Fellow by The Nature Conservancy’s Center for Compatible Economic Development, with the support of the MacArthur Foundation, Mr. Navarro was the first conservation leader from the Caribbean, Latin America and the Pacific rim to be so honored. In 1998 he authored the book Panama National Parks, which was published in Madrid, Spain, and is the country’s first comprehensive text on national parks and nature reserves (currently in its second edition).

Political life

Juan Carlos Navarro joined the Democratic Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Democratico, PRD) in 1998 and was originally elected Mayor of Panama City for a five-year term (1999-2004) after winning his party’s primaries (October 1998) and the general election in May of 1999. He was reelected for a five-year term (2004-2009) in May 2004. The youngest citizen ever elected to the Mayor’s office; Navarro oversaw more than 5,000 municipal employees and a US$101 million annual budget (2008). He was elected unanimously as the first President of the National Mayor’s Association of Panama (2001) and reelected twice for the same position (2003, 2005). Mayor Navarro also served as co-President of the Unión de Ciudades Capitales de Iberoamericanas (UCCI) together with Mayor Alvarez del Manzano of Madrid, Spain (2002).

He quickly established himself as a national party leader and in August 2002 was elected to the nine-member National Executive Committee, the PRD’s top governing organism. In 2008 he was re-elected into the National Executive Committee as the most voted member.

In September 2008 he participated in his party's primaries for President against the then Housing Minister, Balbina Herrera. After a hard fought campaign he was defeated by 4%, thus losing an election for the first time in his political career. Even though he had lost the primaries, he had almost half the party supporting his candidacy and this led Balbina Herrera to nominate him as Vice-Presidential candidate in the PRD ticket for the 2009 presidential election. In that election the PRD and Balbina Herrera lost to Ricardo Martinelli and Juan Carlos Varela by a wide margin.

This led Juan Carlos Navarro to call for all the National Executive Committee members to resign based on the poor election results. In October 2009, Juan Carlos Navarro resigned his post as First Under Secretary in the National Executive Committee and shortly thereafter all other members resigned, including Balbina Herrera and then Secretary-General Martin Torrijos.

In 2012, Juan Carlos Navarro was elected Secretary-General of the PRD, the top post in the party's structure. The political movement he led won all 10 post of the National Executive Committee. This was the first time a party leader was able to accomplish this feat.

In March 2013 he participated once again in his party's primaries for President against 17 other candidates and won with over 95% of the vote. Juan Carlos Navarro is the unquestioned leader of the PRD and was the party's official candidate for the 2014 Presidential elections, where he came third with 28% of the vote.

Eventhough Navarro lost the election, the party got the mayority in the Legislative Assembly. For this reason, after the election Navarro negotiated a legislative pact called "Panama Primero" with President-elect Juan Carlos Varela to secure that many of the projects proposed during his campaign would become a reality. This proposals include the Minister for Environmental Issues and a complete decentralization of the government.

Once the legislative pact was finalized, Navarro resigned his post as Secretary General of the PRD accepting his responsibility for the election results.

Personal life

Juan Carlos Navarro is married to Cuqui Campagnani and they have three children together: Juan Andres, Felipe and Gabriel.


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