Everything about Isabel Per N totally explained
María Estela Martínez Cartas de Perón (born
February 4,
1931), better known as
Isabel Martínez de Perón or
Isabel Perón, was the third wife of
Argentine President Juan Perón. During her husband's third term as president, Isabel served as vice president. After her husband's death in office, Isabel served as president from
July 1,
1974 to
March 24,
1976. She was the first non-royal
female head of state and
head of government in the
Western Hemisphere.
In 2007, an
Argentine judge ordered the arrest of Isabel Perón over the
forced disappearance of an activist in February 1976, on the grounds that the disappearance was authorized by her signing of decrees allowing Argentina's armed forces to take action against "subversives". She was arrested near her home in
Spain on
12 January 2007.
Early life
María Estela Martínez Cartas was born in
La Rioja, Argentina, into a lower middle-class family. She became a nightclub
dancer in the early
1950s, adopting a variant of her
saint's name, Isabela, or
Isabel, as her
stage name.
Career and marriage
Juan Perón
She met her future husband during his exile in
Panama. Perón, who was 35 years older than her, was attracted to her beauty and believed she could provide him with the female companionship he'd been lacking since the death of his second wife,
Eva Perón (also known as Evita). Isabel gave up her career in
show business and became Perón's personal
secretary.
Perón brought Isabel with him when he moved to
Madrid,
Spain, in
1960. Authorities in the
Roman Catholic nation didn't approve of Perón's living arrangements with this young woman, so on
November 15 1961, the former president reluctantly married for a third time.
Early political career
Ambassador Isabel
As Perón began a more active role in Argentine politics, Isabel was as a go-between from Spain to South America. Having been deposed in a coup years before, Perón was forbidden from returning to Argentina, so his new wife would travel in his stead.
José López Rega
It was at this time that Isabel met
José López Rega, an
occult "philosopher" and
fortune teller, who later founded the
Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A), a death squad accused of 1,500 crimes in the
1970s. Isabel was interested in occult matters (and as president reportedly employed astrological divination to determine national policy), so the two quickly became friends. Under pressure from Isabel, Perón appointed López as his personal secretary.
Rise to power
Héctor Cámpora was nominated by Perón's
Justicialist Party to run in the
1973 presidential elections and won. However, it was generally understood that Perón held the real power; a popular phrase at the time was
"Cámpora al gobierno, Perón al poder" (Cámpora to government, Perón to power). Later that year, Perón returned to Argentina. Cámpora resigned to allow Perón to run for president. In a surprisingly uncontroversial move, he chose Isabel as his
running mate. Perón's return from exile was marked by a growing rift between the right and left wings of the
Peronist movement. Cámpora represented the left wing, while López Rega represented the right wing. Under López Rega's influence, Juan and Isabel Perón favored the right wing. Isabel had very little in the way of political experience or ambitions, and she was a very different personality from Evita, who was more involved with politics and had been denied the post of vice president years earlier.
The Martínez de Perón Presidency
Juan Perón died on
July 1,
1974, less than a year after his third election to the presidency. Isabel assumed the office and became the first non-royal
female head of state and head of government in the
Western Hemisphere.
Unlike
Evita, Isabel was very unpopular. One factor was that López Rega, by this time minister of social welfare, had so much influence over Isabel that he was
de facto prime minister. Despite his right-wing views, his status as the
power behind the throne greatly frightened the military.
Fall from power
Isabel agreed to fire López Rega, but the military concluded that with the prevailing climate of widespread strikes and
political terrorism, a "weak-willed and inexperienced woman" wouldn't be a suitable president. Her time in power coincided in a spike in the inflation rate and this didn't help her.
On
March 24 1976, she was deposed in a bloodless coup. After remaining under house arrest for five years, she was sent into exile in
Spain in
1981. She continued to serve as official head of the
Peronist Justicialist Party until her resignation in
1985, nearly a decade after her fall from power. Though there were some who desired her return and wished for her return to power, she refused to stand for election to the presidency. She lived in
Madrid, maintained close links with
Francisco Franco's family, and sometimes went to
Marbella, a Spanish coastal city. Though she returned briefly to Argentina in 1984, after democracy was restored, she resumed residence in Spain under a very low profile.
Arrest in Spain
In
November 2006, a judge in
Mendoza, Argentina demanded testimony from Isabel, along with other Peronist ministers of her government, in a case involving forced disappearances during her presidency. On
January 12,
2007, she was arrested in Madrid. In particular, she was charged by the Argentine authorities with the disappearance of
Héctor Aldo Fagetti Gallego on
February 25 1976, and her issuance of decrees over her signature calling to "annihilate … subversive elements throughout the country". The extradition to Argentina was denied in Spain on March 28th, 2008.
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