Carlos Arango Vélez (Bogotá, February 13, 1897-ibidem, October 12, 1974), was a Colombian Jurist and Liberal Party Politician.
He held several public offices like the Mayor of Bogotá (1935–1936),[1] Minister of War (1931), and Parliamentarian, where he stood out as a skilled orator. He was defeated by Alfonso López Pumarejo in his 1942 run for President of Colombia. Following his loss, he became increasingly close to the progressive sector of conservatism.[2]
He was father-in-law to Colombian president Misael Pastrana Borrero, as one of his daughters married the conservative politician.
Life
Carlos Arango Vélez was born in Bogotá, on February 13, 1897, in the atypical affluent home of two parents from the Atlantic Coast of Colombia who settled in the city.[citation needed]
He was appointed Minister of War and Navy by liberal president Enrique Olaya Herrera, in office from July 28 to November 27 of 1931. During his short time as Minister, he initiated the Colombia-Peru War, the last war to be declared by Colombia against another country.[2]
Prior to the war, skirmishes were taking place that led the ministry to acquire better weapons in the face of the threat of a war. Arango managed the acquisition of new machine guns, rifles, and a renewed war flotilla.[3]
Separation from and return to the Liberal Party
In 1933, Arango decided to separate himself from the official liberalism (of the Colombian Liberal Party), due to some political actions that compromised President Olaya with the conservatives. In response, he joined a leftist movement called the National Leftist Revolutionary Union (Spanish: Unión Nacional de Izquierda Revolucionaria, UNIR),[4] founded, primarily, by the influential liberal lawyer Jorge Eliécer Gaitán.[5][6][7]
To promote UNIR, Arango and founded the newspaper "El Unirismo",[8][9] and sought the implementation of an agrarian reform, which the new president, Alfonso López Pumarejo, would implement in 1936.
However, the harassment that the movement suffered by Liberals and Conservatives alike, their alleged closeness to communists that marginalized them,[10] and their failure in the 1935 parliamentary elections, led Arango and Gaitán to dissolve the movement and return to the official ranks of the Liberal Party.[11]
Mayorship of Bogotá (1935-1936)
In retribution for his return to the Liberal Party, Arango was appointed Superior Mayor of Bogotá by President López Pumarejo, holding the position from October 1935 to March 1936 (Gaitán would later do the same between 1936 and 1937).[1][12] During his mayoralty, he gave an award-winning speech on Russiansocialist activist Rosa Luxemburg, at the Teatro Colón.[2]
Arango was also a professor of Criminal Law at the National University of Colombia, during those years. He directed the Colombian Newspaper El Nacional, was a Representative in the Chamber, and Senator for several periods. He was also Colombia's ambassador to the Holy See in 1942, at the request of outgoing President Eduardo Santos.[citation needed]
Arango launched his presidential candidacy for the 1942 elections supported by the radical sector of the Liberal Party, and with the approval of Laureano Gómez, president of the Conservative Party. With his candidacy, Arango aimed to confront the ruling Liberal Party, which was supporting the re-election of former President Alfonso López Pumarejo.[2]
Among his conservative allies were the young lawyer Misael Pastrana Borrero (who was a protégé of businessman Mariano Ospina Pérez),[13] and the Santista sector of the Liberal Party, led by former president Eduardo Santos, who were the minority in the party. In addition to the support of Jorge Eliecer Gaitán himself, he brought together communists and radical liberals. Despite this coalition of support, former president López Pumarejo defeated Arango by a considerable margin (close to an 8-point difference).[citation needed]
Relationship with the Conservative Party
Despite his defeat as a dissident liberal in 1942, his loyalty to conservatism made him a key player during the government of Ospina Pérez, who was elected president of Colombia in 1946 after the chaotic second government of López, who was forced to resign in 1945, leaving power in the hands of Pérez, his Interior Minister.[citation needed]
As a result of the division of the Liberal Party, one sector supporting Gabriel Turbay's official candidacy, and another Jorge Eliécer Gaitán's, and another Darío Echandía's, which never happened, the conservatives regained power after losing it in 1930. Within the Ospina government, he held the position of Vice President of Colombia in 1946.[14]
His ties with the conservatives did not stop there; in 1951, his eldest daughter married Misael Pastrana, whom she met in 1950, when Arango was acting as Colombia's Ambassador to the Holy See and Pope Pius XI under then president-elect Laureano Gómez. In office, with the support of his now son-in-law, he renegotiated the terms of the papal concordat.[2]
He was appointed, by President Gómez, Colombia's Ambassador to Brazil, remaining in this position even during the dictatorship of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, until his resignation in 1955, following the closure of the liberal newspaper El Tiempo (owned by Eduardo Santos) by the military government.[2]
After the dictatorship, in 1958, he was appointed by liberal president Alberto Lleras Camargo Colombia's Ambassador to, once again, the Holy See, this time under Pope Juan XIII, remaining in the office until 1960.[2] In 1969, he supported the candidacy of his son-in-law Misael Pastrana, who was elected in a disputed election on April 19, 1970.
Final years
Carlos Arango Vélez died in Bogotá on October 12, 1974, just months after his son-in-law left the presidency August 7, 1974. He was 77 years old and had been hospitalized for several days at the prestigious Shaio Clinic (Spanish: Clínica de Shaio). The Liberal Party, President Alfonso López Michelsen, and the Ospino-Pastranista sector of the Conservative Party led his posthumous tributes.[15]
María "Maruja" Vega was the granddaughter of Clementina Portocarrero Caycedo,[2] who, in urn, was the great-niece of Domingo Caycedo through her mother Dolores Caycedo. Clementina was also the great-niece of Jorge Tadeo Lozano, through her father José María Portocarrero y Ricaurte, the great-grandson of Jorge Miguel Lozano, father of Jorge Tadeo.
Children and descendants
From his marriage to María Vega, their three daughters María Cristina, María Isabel, and María Elvira Arango Vega were born.[2]
María Cristina Arango married Huila politician Misael Pastrana Borrero, president of Colombia between 1970 and 1974, and from this union Juan Carlos, Andrés, Jaime, and Cristina Pastrana Arango were born. Juan Carlos Pastrana is a journalist, and Andrés Pastrana is a prominent politician who was president from 1998 to 2002.[citation needed]
^ abcdefghi"Murió Carlos Arango Vélez" [Carlos Arango Vélez Died]. news.google.com (in Spanish). El Tiempo. 13 October 1974. Archived from the original on 7 October 2023. Retrieved 19 August 2021.