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  1. Luis de Acre; Información personal; Nacimiento: Siglo XIII juliano Acre (Reino de Jerusalén) Fallecimiento: 1297: Familia; Padres: Juan de Brienne Berenguela de León: Cónyuge: Agnès de Beaumont-au-Maine (desde 1253 juliano) Hijos: Henry de Beaumont: Información profesional; Ocupación: Aristócrata

    • Agnès de Beaumont-au-Maine (desde 1253juliano)
    • Siglo XIIIjuliano
    • 1297
  2. www.wikiwand.com › es › Luis_de_AcreLuis de Acre - Wikiwand

    Luis de Brienne, llamado Luis de Acre (fallecido después de septiembre de 1297) fue por matrimonio vizconde de Beaumont de la casa de Brienne. Luis era el hijo menor de Juan de Brienne, rey de Jerusalén, cogobernante del Imperio latino de Constantinopla, y de su tercera esposa Berenguela de León, hija del rey Alfonso IX de León.

  3. La República de Acre (nombre oficial: Estado Independiente de Acre) fue un breve Estado nacional proclamado el 14 de julio de 1899 por el español Luis Gálvez Rodríguez de Arias con el apoyo del gobierno del estado de Amazonas.

    • Overview
    • Early life and career
    • Joining the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS), becoming Evo Morales’s right-hand man, and guiding the Bolivian economy
    • The 2019 Bolivian presidential election, temporary exile, and Arce’s ascent to the presidency

    Luis Arce, (born September 28, 1963, La Paz, Bolivia), Bolivian politician, economist, banker, and academic who became president of Bolivia in November 2020, returning the country to socialist rule after an interregnum of acting right-wing government that had resulted from the 2019 presidential election in which the victory of nearly 14-year (2006–...

    Arce grew up in La Paz, where both of his parents were public school teachers. His secondary education came at the Mexico School, in the capital. From there he went on to study accounting at the Institute of Banking Education, from which he graduated in 1984. Arce then matriculated at the Higher University of San Andrés (UMSA), earning a bachelor’s...

    In 1999 Arce became part of a circle of UMSA professors and socialist activists who began meeting to discuss the inequities of the Bolivian economic system. Their goal was “to dismantle the neoliberal model and turn the State into a planner, investor, banker, regulator and producer of development.” In 2005, as Morales prepared to mount his second run for the presidency, he invited a number of leftist academics to join MAS to help formulate the economic component of the party’s platform for the upcoming election. Among those who joined the team were Arce and Carlos Villegas Quiroga. The program they crafted sought to “build a dignified, communal, supportive and productive Bolivia” by nationalizing the oil and gas industry and by enacting land reform that broke up large agricultural estates and distributed the land among peasant farmers.

    When Morales won, he brought Arce, then aged 43, and Quiroga into his “People’s Cabinet” as the minister of finance and minister of planning and the minister of development, respectively. Morales’s socialist government joined the so-called Pink Tide of leftist regimes that came to power in Latin America in the 2000s. In addition to Bolivia, by 2010 Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Venezuela all were ruled by leftist governments, many of which reshaped their economies, nationalizing key industries, and dramatically increased social spending.

    In the meantime, judicial rulings had removed term limits for the presidency (in the face of a national referendum in which some 51 percent of those who voted rejected that change to the constitution), and Morales sought reelection in October 2019. After about four-fifths of the ballots had been counted, it appeared as if Morales would fall short of the support needed to preclude a runoff, but a roughly 24-hour delay in tabulating was followed by a dramatic reversal that revealed Morales to be the outright victor, prompting accusations of election fraud that were echoed by the Organization of American States (OAS). In the coming weeks, Morales was forced to step down and flee into exile, ultimately in Argentina, claiming that he had been deposed by a coup, and the election was subsequently invalidated. In early December, Arce followed suit and sought asylum in Mexico.

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    In 2020, as the caretaker right-wing government promised a prompt new election but postponed it repeatedly in response to the coronavirus pandemic that swept the globe, some international organizations began to question the validity of the OAS’s evaluation of the October 2019 election. From afar Morales began orchestrating a return to power for MAS that began with his selection of Arce as the party’s presidential candidate in the election that was finally set to take place in October 2020. Although he had a reputation as a mild-mannered technocrat, Arce in fact was a passionate socialist with an abiding affinity for legendary revolutionary Che Guevara, as well as for Bolivian socialist martyrs Marcelo Quiroga Santa Cruz and Óscar Únzaga de la Vega.

  4. 27 de sept. de 2023 · 27 septiembre 2023. Desde hace meses, ha ido creciendo en Bolivia una pelea de poder entre el expresidente Evo Morales y su sucesor, Luis Arce, que podría terminar en una ruptura en las...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Luis_ArceLuis Arce - Wikipedia

    Luis Alberto Arce Catacora (Spanish: [ˈlwis alˈβeɾto ˈaɾse kataˈkoɾa]; born 28 September 1963), often referred to as Lucho, is a Bolivian banker, economist, and politician serving as the 67th president of Bolivia since 2020.

  6. 8 de nov. de 2020 · Juan Karita/AP. CNN — Bolivia’s Luis Arce was inaugurated as President on Sunday, capping a tumultuous period for the Andean nation and ushering the socialists back into power after long-term...