Matías Daniel Lammens Núñez was born on 5 April 1980 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was educated at the prestigious Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires, graduating in 1998.[1] Lammens has stated it was in the Colegio Nacional that he first became interested in politics.[2] He studied law at the University of Buenos Aires and later studied political economy at the Torcuato di Tella University.[3]
His business career started when he set up a kiosk in 2003; he later founded Ñuque Mapu SRL, a Buenos Aires–based company dedicated to the sale and distribution of alcoholic beverages, chiefly wine.[4]
Involvement in San Lorenzo
A lifelong supporter of the club, Lammens's involvement in the board of directors of Club Atlético San Lorenzo began in early 2012 through his close relationship with club associate and TV presenter Marcelo Tinelli, whom he met in a family reunion.[5] Alongside Tinelli he formed the San Lorenzo Siglo XXI association, and upon the resignation of Carlos Abdo from the club's presidency in August 2012, he was appointed interim chairman, becoming the youngest person to hold the post at 32.[6] He later ran for the chairmanship with Tinelli in the ticket as vice chairman, and won with over 80% of the popular vote.[5]
The club was in a dire situation at the time of Lammens's takeover, highly indebted and with a large operative deficit, and in the midst of a club workers' strike due to the former presidency's inability to pay their wages.[7] The club's football team's position in the Primera División was threatened by a row of bad results, a situation that wouldn't be reversed until 2013. The Lammens-Tinelli leadership proved effective in reducing the club's financial woes, and the 2013 Torneo Inicial victory was hailed as a turnaround for San Lorenzo under its new directive board.[8][9] Lammens later presented Pope Francis (a fan and follower of the club) with a replica of the coup.[10]
Later, in 2014, San Lorenzo won the Copa Libertadores for the first time in the club's history. Lammens is also credited with lobbying the Buenos Aires City Legislature into ceding a space in the Boedo neighbourhood (historic home of San Lorenzo) to build the club's new home stadium.[3] In October 2014 Lammens rejected an offer by the Azerbaijani government to sponsor the club, citing Azerbaijan's poor human rights record and the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh;[11] the move drew praise from Argentina's sizeable Armenian community.[12][13][14]
His mayoral ticket was completed by journalist and writer Gisela Marziotta, who ran as vice-chief of government. His campaign was focused on Mauricio Macri's perceived economic mismanagements in the national government, and the incumbent Horacio Rodríguez Larreta's association with the president and his party.[17]
At the election on 27 October 2019, Lammens received a 687.026 votes – or 35% – losing in the first round against Rodríguez Larreta's 55.9%.[18] Despite the wide loss margin, Lammens's share of the votes represents the best electoral result for an opposition party in Buenos Aires City since Mauricio Macri's victory in 2007.
Ministry of Tourism and Sports
On 10 December 2019, Lammens was appointed by incoming president Alberto Fernández as minister of the newly restored Ministry of Tourism and Sports, succeeding Gustavo Santos and Diógenes de Urquiza, respectively the secretaries of Tourism and of Sports in Mauricio Macri's cabinet.[19] Sports-wise, Lammens stated his intention of focusing on neighbourhood clubs.[20]
Lammens's appointment as Tourism and Sports minister coincided with the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina. The Fernández administration chose to close down nearly all sports venues, and the closing of the country's external and internal borders effectively shut down tourism for the duration of the lockdown measures. As part of the ministry's salvagement measures, Lammens launched an emergency investment fund, infrastructure boosts,[21] and the PreViaje programme, wherein the government committed to repaying up to 50% of all travel expenses for internal tourists in the 2020–2021 summer season.[22] Over 500.000 people signed up for the programme, according to government figures.[23] The programme was renewed ahead of the 2021–2022 summer season as well.[24]
^"Elecciones 2019". eleccionesciudad.gob.ar (in Spanish). Tribunal Superior de Justicia de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
^"Elecciones 2023". buenosaires.gob.ar (in Spanish). Resultados elecciones 2023. Retrieved 10 December 2023.