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Vice President of Uruguay

Second-highest constitutional office in Uruguay


Second-highest constitutional office in Uruguay

FieldValue
postVice President of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay
native_nameVicepresidente de la República Oriental del Uruguay
imageIntendenta de Montevideo Carolina Cosse (cropped).jpg
incumbentCarolina Cosse
incumbentsince1 March 2025
seatLegislative Palace
termlengthFive years, renewable indefinitely but not immediately
inauguralAlfredo Navarro
formation1 March 1934
websitepresidencia.gub.uy

The vice president of Uruguay is the person with the second-highest position in the executive branch of the Uruguayan government, after the President of Uruguay. The vice president replaces the elected President in case of death or absence. The vice president is also an officer in the legislative branch, president of the Chamber of Senators and the General Assembly.

The president and vice president run on a single ticket submitted by their party. A runoff is held between the top two candidates if no candidate obtains the majority of votes (50%+1). In this case, the candidate who receives a plurality in the runoff wins the election. The current Vice President is Carolina Cosse, who took office on March 1, 2025.

History

The position of Vice-President of the Republic was established in the Constitution of 1934. Previously, the President of the Senate assumed the Presidency in case of the absence of the President. The Constitution of 1952 established a 9-member executive council, the National Council of Government, abolishing the figure of the Vice President. The Constitution of 1967 eliminated the National Council of Government and resumed the presidential system, maintaining the figure of the Vice President.

List of vice presidents of Uruguay

No.PortraitName
(Birth–Death)Term of officePolitical
partyElectionsPresidentNotes
StartEnd12345678910111213141516171819
[[File:Decano-Dr-Alfredo-Navarro.png100px]]Alfredo Navarro
(1868–1951)18 May 193419 June 1938Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"ColoradoGabriel TerraElected by the 3rd National Constituent Convention.
[[File:Cesar Charlone.jpg100px]]César Charlone
(1895–1973)19 June 19381 March 1943Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1938Alfredo Baldomir
[[File:Alberto Guani en 1942 (cropped).png100px]]Alberto Guani
(1877–1956)1 March 19431 March 1947Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1942Juan José de Amézaga
[[File:Lbberres23.jpg100px]]Luis Batlle Berres
(1897–1964)1 March 19472 August 1947Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1946Tomás BerretaAssumed the presidency after the death of Tomás Berreta.
[[File:Alfeo Brum.jpg100px]]Alfeo Brum
(1898–1972)2 August 19471 March 1951Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"ColoradoLuis Batlle BerresAssumed the Vice Presidency as first senator of the most voted party.
1 March 19511 March 1952Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1950Andrés Martínez TruebaThe post of President and Vice President were replaced by the National Council of Government.
*Post abolished
1 March 1952 – 1 March 1967*}}National Council of Government
[[File:Jorge Pacheco Areco (cropped).jpg100px]]Jorge Pacheco Areco
(1920–1998)1 March 19676 December 1967Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1966Óscar Diego GestidoAssumed the presidency after the death of Óscar Diego Gestido.
[[File:Alberto Abdala (cropped).jpg100px]]Alberto Abdala
(1920–1986)6 December 19671 March 1972Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"ColoradoJorge Pacheco ArecoAssumed the Vice Presidency as first senator of the most voted party.
[[File:Jorge Sapelli (cropped).jpg100px]]Jorge Sapelli
(1926–1996)1 March 197227 June 1973Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1971Juan María BordaberryOusted from office by a coup d'état.
*Vacant
27 June 1973 – 1 March 1985*}}Civic-military dictatorship
[[File:Tarigoconabrigoj.jpg100px]]Enrique Tarigo
(1927–2002)1 March 19851 March 1990Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1984Julio María Sanguinetti
[[File:Gonzalo Aguirre en 1989 (cropped).jpg100px]]Gonzalo Aguirre Ramírez
(1940–2021)1 March 19901 March 1995National Party (Uruguay)}}"National1989Luis Alberto Lacalle
[[File:Hugo Batalla.jpg100px]]Hugo Batalla
(1926–1998)1 March 19953 October 1998Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1994Julio María SanguinettiDied in office.
[[File:Batllefaingbis.jpg100px]]Hugo Fernández Faingold
(1947–2025)3 October 19981 March 2000Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"ColoradoAssumed the Vice Presidency as first senator of the most voted party.
[[File:Luis Hierro López.jpg100px]]Luis Hierro López
(1947–)1 March 20001 March 2005Colorado Party (Uruguay)}}"Colorado1999Jorge Batlle
[[File:Rodolfoninnovoa.jpg100px]]Rodolfo Nin Novoa
(1948–)1 March 20051 March 2010Broad Front (Uruguay)}}"Broad Front2004Tabaré Vázquez
[[File:Danilo Astori.jpg100px]]Danilo Astori
(1940–2023)1 March 20101 March 2015Broad Front (Uruguay)}}"Broad Front2009José Mujica
[[File:27 de enero Secretario General, Ernesto Samper Pizano, recibió en UNASUR a Presidentes de la CELAC (cropped).jpg100px]]Raúl Sendic Rodríguez
(1962–)1 March 201513 September 2017Broad Front (Uruguay)}}"Broad Front2014Tabaré VázquezResigned.
[[File:Lucía Topolansky (cropped).png100px]]Lucía Topolansky
(1944–)13 September 20171 March 2020Broad Front (Uruguay)}}"Broad FrontAssumed the Vice Presidency as second senator of the most voted party, as the first senator of the most voted party, José Mujica, can only be President or Vice President until 5 years after his term ends.
[[File:2024-08-29 Reunião com Beatriz Argimón, Vice-Presidente do Uruguai, 15 (cropped).jpg100px]]Beatriz Argimón
(1961–)1 March 20201 March 2025National Party (Uruguay)}}"National2019Luis Lacalle PouBecame the first woman elected to this position.
[[File:Intendenta de Montevideo Carolina Cosse (cropped).jpg100px]]Carolina Cosse
(1961–)1 March 2025IncumbentBroad Front (Uruguay)}}"Broad Front2024Yamandú Orsi

Trivia

  • After decades of exclusively male presence, since 13 September 2017 to date (for ), the vice-presidency has been held by women without interruption: Lucía Topolansky (the first woman to ever hold the position, in her case, following the resignation of Raúl Sendic), Beatriz Argimón (the first woman directly elected to the position), and Carolina Cosse (in office since 1 March 2025).
  • As of , no openly LGBTQ person has ever held office as vice president.
  • César Charlone (5 October 1895 – 8 May 1973) was the youngest vice president to take office (aged ).
  • Lucía Topolansky (born 25 September 1944) was the oldest vice president to take office (aged ).
  • César Charlone was the vice president who lived the longest after leaving office (); he died at the age of .
  • Danilo Astori (23 April 1940 – 10 November 2023) was the vice president who lived the shortest time after completing his term (). But at the same time, he was the longest-lived: he died at the age of .
  • Alberto Abdala (8 April 1920 – 13 January 1986) was the shortest-lived vice president: he died at the age of .
  • Alfeo Brum (22 March 1898 – 25 February 1972) was the last vice president born in the 19th century.
  • Jorge Pacheco Areco (9 April 1920 – 29 July 1998) was the first vice president born in the 20th century.
  • As of , Hugo Batalla (11 July 1926 – 3 October 1998) has been the only vice president to have died in office. Further, he was the last vice president who died in the 20th century.
  • Enrique Tarigo (15 September 1927 – 14 December 2002) has been the only vice president who had not held any public office before being elected to the vice-presidency, nor did he hold any elected office again afterwards. Further, he was the first vice president who died in the 21st century.
  • Rodolfo Nin Novoa (born 25 January 1948) and Carolina Cosse (born 25 December 1961) are, to date, the only vice presidents who were previously intendants of a department (Cerro Largo and Montevideo, respectively).
  • Raúl Sendic (born 29 August 1962) was the only vice president to be forced to resign amid a political scandal.
  • Jorge Sapelli (8 March 1926 – 13 January 1996) was the only vice president to resign in opposition to a coup d'état, in 1973.

References

References

  1. Uruguay, Presidencia de la República Oriental del. "Luis Lacalle Pou y Beatriz Argimón juraron como presidente y vicepresidenta de la República - Presidencia de la República".
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