Terence Cola: Difference between revisions
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Dr. '''Terence Galanza Cola Nguema''' (born 24 October 1948) is a [[Santa Rosa|Santa Rosan]] politician and lawyer currently serving as the 28th [[President of Santa Rosa]] since 20 August 1994. | Dr. '''Terence Galanza Cola Nguema''' (born 24 October 1948) is a [[Santa Rosa|Santa Rosan]] politician and lawyer currently serving as the 28th [[President of Santa Rosa]] since 20 August 1994. | ||
== Political career == | == Political career == | ||
=== Presidency ( | === Presidency (1994–) === | ||
Cola won the [[1994 Santa Rosan presidential election|1990 presidential election]] with 75.40% of the vote in the second round, defeating incumbent prime minister [[Antonio Lardesi]] in a landslide. | |||
Cola was inaugurated in [[Ciudad Beldad]] on 20 August 1994. | |||
==== Cabinet ==== | ==== Cabinet ==== | ||
Prior to forming his cabinet, Cola's [[Social Democratic Party (Santa Rosa)|Social Democratic Party]] (PSD) formed a congressional alliance with the [[Movement to Socialism]] (MAS) and the [[Communist Party of Santa Rosa]] (PCSR), called the [[Popular Front (Santa Rosa)|Popular Front]]. The Popular Front was the largest political alliance of leftist parties in the history of Santa Rosa, holding 165 of the 213 seats in the National Assembly and 29 of the 42 seats in the Senate, giving the bloc a super-majority to legislate without opposition. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
!'''Portfolio''' | !'''Portfolio''' | ||
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==== Domestic policy ==== | ==== Domestic policy ==== | ||
==== Foreign policy ==== | ==== Foreign policy ==== | ||
==Awards and honours== | |||
===Awards=== | |||
* 1995 – [[Bernstein Peace Award]] | |||
{{APSIA}} | {{APSIA}} | ||
[[Category:Santa Rosa]] | [[Category:Santa Rosa]] |
Revision as of 02:50, 22 June 2019
Dr. Terence Cola Nguema | |
---|---|
28th President of Santa Rosa | |
Assumed office 20 August 1994 | |
Vice President | Geraldo Gran Cebolla |
Preceded by | Paul Oppenheimer |
President of the National Assembly | |
In office 20 August 1990 – 14 November 1991 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Terence Galanza Cola Nguema 24 October 1948 Alhambra, Santa Rosa |
Political party | PSD |
Spouse | Seble Cola |
Children | 5 |
Education | University of Campinas (BA) Law School of Sorocaba (BL, LLD) |
Awards | Bernstein Peace Award (1995) |
Dr. Terence Galanza Cola Nguema (born 24 October 1948) is a Santa Rosan politician and lawyer currently serving as the 28th President of Santa Rosa since 20 August 1994.
Political career
Presidency (1994–)
Cola won the 1990 presidential election with 75.40% of the vote in the second round, defeating incumbent prime minister Antonio Lardesi in a landslide.
Cola was inaugurated in Ciudad Beldad on 20 August 1994.
Cabinet
Prior to forming his cabinet, Cola's Social Democratic Party (PSD) formed a congressional alliance with the Movement to Socialism (MAS) and the Communist Party of Santa Rosa (PCSR), called the Popular Front. The Popular Front was the largest political alliance of leftist parties in the history of Santa Rosa, holding 165 of the 213 seats in the National Assembly and 29 of the 42 seats in the Senate, giving the bloc a super-majority to legislate without opposition.
Portfolio | Minister | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|---|
President | Tito Pérez | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Vice President | Carmella Grosso | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Chief of Staff | Julio Reijnders | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Defense | Gen. Paul Oppenheimer | N/A | 20 Aug 1990 – 2 Sep 1991 | |
Pablo Luchador | PSD | 2 Sep 1991 – | ||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Billy Marino | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Economics | Jorge Savidge | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Justice | Ghislain Stilo | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Health | Dr. Lea Harris | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of the Environment | Marta Hailey | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Education | Rens Fontana | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – | |
Minister of Labor | Eleonora Spada | PSD | 20 Aug 1990 – |
Domestic policy
Foreign policy
Awards and honours
Awards
- 1995 – Bernstein Peace Award
This article is from APSIA 1.2. For the most recent iteration of APSIA, look at Category:APSIA 2.B |