Jorge Rodríguez | |
Office: | Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers |
President: | Carlos Menem |
Term Start: | 28 March 1996 |
Term End: | 10 December 1999 |
Predecessor: | Eduardo Bauzá |
Successor: | Rodolfo Terragno |
Office1: | Minister of Education and Culture |
President1: | Carlos Menem |
Term Start1: | 4 December 1992 |
Term End1: | 28 March 1996 |
Predecessor1: | Antonio Salonia |
Successor1: | Susana Decibe |
Birth Place: | Coronel Hilario Lagos, Argentina |
Education: | University of Buenos Aires |
Jorge Alberto Rodríguez (born 1944) is an Argentine Justicialist Party politician who served as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers and as Minister of Education during the second presidency of Carlos Menem.
Rodríguez was born in 1944 in Coronel Hilario Lagos, a rural village in La Pampa Province. He became politically active in the Peronist movement as a student in the University of Buenos Aires Faculty of Agronomy and Veterinary Sciences, from which he graduated in 1971. He continued to participate in political activities until the 1976 coup d'état, later settling in the United States, where he earned a master's degree in science at the University of Nebraska.[1]
From 1983 to 1987, Rodríguez served as Undersecretary of Agrarian Affairs of La Pampa Province, during the governorship of Rubén Marín. Later, from 1987 to 1989, he served as the province's Minister of Education, but resigned to run for a seat in the National Chamber of Deputies.[1]
In 1992, Rodríguez was appointed as Minister of Education and Culture of Argentina by President Carlos Menem, succeeding Antonio Salonia. In 1996, Menem appointed Rodríguez as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers. He was the second person to serve in the post, following its creation by the 1994 constitutional amendments. Despite rumours of his intention to resign in 1997, Rodríguez remained in the position throughout the remainder of Menem's presidency, serving until December 1999.[2]
In 2004, Rodríguez testified in the trial against fellow Menem administration secretary María Julia Alsogaray, who stood accused of corruption.[3] Later, in 2006, Rodríguez was formally accused of embezzlement on his own, for having allegedly allowed the use of public money for a seminar conducted by a private company.[4]
Rodríguez was married to María Susana Pangallo, with whom he has two children.[5]
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