President of Costa Madora: Difference between revisions
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! Left office | ! Left office | ||
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! colspan="5" | First Republic ( | ! colspan="5" | First Republic (1821–1852) | ||
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! 1 | ! 1 | ||
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| Marcial Paredes<br>{{small|(1808–1857)}} | | Marcial Paredes<br>{{small|(1808–1857)}} | ||
| June 18, 1837 | | June 18, 1837 | ||
| April | | April 13, 1840 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! 4 | ! 4 | ||
| [[File:Jose_Galvez_Egusquiza.jpg|100px]] | | [[File:Jose_Galvez_Egusquiza.jpg|100px]] | ||
| José Fulgencio Suácos<br>{{small|( | | José Fulgencio Suácos<br>{{small|(1804–1847)}} | ||
| April | | April 13, 1840 | ||
| August | | August 21, 1847 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! 5 | ! 5 | ||
| [[File:Freire por Monvoisin.gif|100px]] | | [[File:Freire por Monvoisin.gif|100px]] | ||
| Rafael Meranza<br>{{small|(1806–1867)}} | | Rafael Meranza<br>{{small|(1806–1867)}} | ||
| August | | August 21, 1847 | ||
| 1852 | | 1852 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="5" | | ! colspan="5" | Second Republic (1852–1941) | ||
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! | ! | ||
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| May 27, 1945 | | May 27, 1945 | ||
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! colspan="5" | | ! colspan="5" | Third Republic (1945–1971) | ||
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! | ! | ||
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| October 2, 1965 | | October 2, 1965 | ||
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! colspan="5" | | ! colspan="5" | Fourth Republic (1971–present) | ||
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! | ! |
Revision as of 17:37, 15 October 2023
President of Costa Madora | |
---|---|
Presidente de Costa Madora | |
Style |
|
Residence | Palacio de Tiahuajama |
Nominator | Political parties or self-nomination |
Appointer | Direct popular vote |
Term length | 4 years, renewable once |
Deputy | Vice President |
Salary | M₡384,000 (annually) |
Website | tiahuajama.gov |
The President of Costa Madora (Madorian: Presidente de Costa Madora) is the head of state and government of Costa Madora and commander-in-chief of the Madorian Armed Forces.
Under Article VII of the Madorian Constitution, the President exercises executive power, holding the office for a term of four years, which can be renewed once. The power includes the law enforcement and execution, and the responsibility to appoint executive, diplomatic, regulatory, and judicial officers. Based on constitutional provisions empowering the president to appoint and receive ambassadors and conclude treaties with foreign powers, and on subsequent laws enacted by the National Assembly, the modern presidency has primary responsibility for conducting Costa Madora's foreign policy.
Carlos Arduga is the TBEth and current President of Costa Madora, assuming the office on June 21, 2023.
History
List of Presidents
No. | Portrait | Officeholder | Term of office | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | |||
First Republic (1821–1852) | ||||
1 | Felipe Hernando de Villasante (1787–1853) |
June 18, 1821 | June 18, 1833 | |
2 | Alejandro Italá (1793–1851) |
June 18, 1833 | June 18, 1837 | |
3 | Marcial Paredes (1808–1857) |
June 18, 1837 | April 13, 1840 | |
4 | José Fulgencio Suácos (1804–1847) |
April 13, 1840 | August 21, 1847 | |
5 | Rafael Meranza (1806–1867) |
August 21, 1847 | 1852 | |
Second Republic (1852–1941) | ||||
Roberto Martínguez (1896–1993) |
June ??, 1938 | October 10, 1941 | ||
Madorian State (1941–1945) | ||||
Jan Esparca (1897–1953) |
October 10, 1941 | May 27, 1945 | ||
Third Republic (1945–1971) | ||||
Jean-Marc Átudela (1894–1981) |
June 6, 1945 | August 18, 1953 | ||
Juan Francisco Abiejón (1912–1966) |
August 18, 1953 | October 2, 1965 | ||
Fourth Republic (1971–present) | ||||
Javier Elías Aguados (1934–1986) |
June 21, 1971 | June 21, 1979 | ||
File:Pau Aranda (1999).jpg | Pau Aranda (1926–2020) |
June 21, 1979 | June 21, 1983 | |
Miguel Henrique Asalvez (1935–) |
June 21, 1983 | June 21, 1987 | ||
Lucia Asalvez (1939–) |
June 21, 1987 | June 21, 1995 | ||
Raúl Albaceón (1933–2022) |
June 21, 1995 | June 21, 1999 | ||
Mats Strandberg (1959–2011) |
June 21, 2007 | April 23, 2011 | ||
Pol Olloqui (1948–) |
June 21, 2011 | June 21, 2015 | ||
Antonio Nescós (1963–) |
June 21, 2015 | June 21, 2019 | ||
Eva Strandberg (1978–) |
June 21, 2019 | June 21, 2023 | ||
File:Carlos Arduga cropped.jpg | Carlos Arduga (1955–) |
June 21, 2023 | Incumbent |