Manuel Alesna Cuenco (November 10, 1907 – October 18, 1970) was a Filipino physician and politician from Cebu, Philippines. He was the former Governor of Cebu (1946–1951), administrator of the Overseas Employment Council, and the Secretary of Health (1964–1965).
Before the outbreak of the war, he worked as company physician for the Cebu Portland Cement Company in Naga, Cebu,[1] a government-owned-and-controlled company that was later privatized.[3]
After World War II in 1946,[2] then President Manuel Roxas appointed him as Governor of the province of Cebu. The next year, he was reelected as a Liberal Party candidate for another term.[1][4] In 1951, he was defeated by Sergio Osmeña Jr. in his bid to be elected again as governor and the electoral protest he filed on the outcome of the 1951 election before the Court of First Instance against Osmeña was dismissed on September 4, 1954.[5]
He was appointed and worked as the administrator of Overseas Employment Council from 1962 until 1963, and appointed as the Secretary of Health from December, 1964 to December, 1965.[2] His appointment to the Cabinet of then President Diosdado Macapagal as the head of the Department of Health was the result of the alliance between otherwise local political rivals, the Osmeña and the Cuenco clans. The alliance was formed against the reelection of Carlos P. Garcia, whom Macapagal defeated in the 1961 elections.[6][7]
Governor M. Cuenco Avenue that stretches from Archbishop Reyes Avenue to the Mahiga Bridge was named in his honor by virtue of City Ordinance No. 869.[1]
References
^ abcdOaminal, Oaminal (September 27, 2013). "Manuel A. Cuenco Avenue, Cebu City". Philippine Star; The Freeman through Pressreader. Retrieved May 10, 2019 – via PressReader.
^Oaminal, Clarence Paul (March 22, 2019). "The Cuenco-Osmeña fusion | The Freeman". The Philippine Star. Philippine Star; The Freeman through Pressreader. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
^Lindio, Lope (2015). Father & Son: Overlapping Ordinary Lives on the Sidelines of Extra-Ordinary Times 20Th Century Philippines. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN9781503544673.