Víctor Manuel Morales Mora is a Costa Rican politician and lawyer. He has served as a government minister in three different administrations and served a deputy. He was the mayor of Aserrí between 2010 and 2014.
Biographic information
Morales was born in Poás de Aserrí. He grew up in Aserrí proper.[1] He studied at Andrés Corrales Mora Elementary and the Liceo de Aserrí High School, where he was the President of his student government.[1] He attended the University of Costa Rica where he studied political science and philosophy, earning a national certificate that enabled him to practice law.
Public service
Between 1978 and 1986, Morales worked as a municipal register.[2] In 1982, he was president of the group Social Christian Youth, a political advocacy organization. Between 1990 and 1992, Morales served as Vice-Minister of Labor to Rafael Calderón Fournier.
Between 1998 and 2002, he was Minister of Labor to Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Echeverría.[2] In this position, he pushed for the Workers' Protection Law, which provided basic rights to unrepresented workers.[1]
In 2006, Morales left PUSC.[3] Morales was one of a number of PUSC members to abandon the party after a string of corruption scandals.
While teaching law between 2006 and 2010, Morales was also a legal adviser.[4]
Mayor of Aserrí
In 2010, Morales was elected mayor of Aserrí, a municipality in the San José with a population of nearly 60,000[5] He ran as part of a coalition of parties: PAC, PUSC, and Accessibility without Exclusion (PASE for its Spanish initials).[4] During his campaign, Morales promised to increase public security with the creation of a municipal police force, assure water security, increase citizen participation through such measures as a digital communications line to city officials, improve accessibility for disabled persons, and support environmental protections.[1] As mayor, Morales participated in the United Nations Disaster Office for Disaster Risk Reduction.[5] Morales also instituted a problem-solving forum called "Dialogues" that sought to resolve conflicts through consensus.[6]
With less than a month left in his term as mayor, President-elect Luis Guillermo Solís appointed Morales to his cabinet as Minister of Labor.[3]