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Antonio Guzmán Fernández

Silvestre Antonio Guzmán Fernández
Coat of arms of the Dominican Republic.svg 46th President of the Dominican Republic
In office
August 16, 1978 – July 4, 1982
Vice President Jacobo Majluta Azar
Preceded by Joaquín Balaguer
Succeeded by Jacobo Majluta
Personal details
Born February 12, 1911
La Vega, Dominican Republic
Died July 4, 1982 (aged 71)
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Nationality Dominican
Political party Dominican Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s) Renée Klang (m. 1939)
Children three
Profession Agronomist,
Businessman
Politician
Christening 4 May 1911

Silvestre Antonio Guzmán Fernández (February 12, 1911 – July 4, 1982) was a Dominican businessman and a politician. He was the 46th President of the Dominican Republic, from 1978 to 1982.

Antonio Guzmán was born in the town of La Vega. He studied in the primary and secondary schools of La Vega.

He worked in the fruit exportation business and soon became a wealthy rancher as well.

An early member of Juan Bosch’s Dominican Revolutionary Party, he served as secretary of agriculture in Bosch’s brief 1963 administration. In May 1966 he was the vice-presidential candidate for the PRD, with Bosch as the candidate for president. The elections were won, however, by Joaquín Balaguer.

He ran for president in 1974 as the candidate of a united opposition ticket. However, he pulled out after Balaguer changed the rules in a way that the opposition felt was unfair and undemocratic.

Guzmán ran for president again in 1978 as the PRD candidate, with Jacobo Majluta as his running mate. When election returns showed an unmistakable trend in Guzmán's favor, the military stopped the count. However, amid vigorous protests at home and strong pressure abroad, the count resumed. When the returns were all in, Guzmán handed Balaguer the first loss of his electoral career. When Balaguer left office that year, it marked the first time in the Dominican Republic's history that an incumbent president peacefully surrendered power to an elected member of the opposition.

Guzmán's political plan was to move slowly to reform the social and economic aspects of the Dominican Republic, while he tried to have direct contact with the armed forces because of their threat concerning pressure in the political field. To directly attack the last problem, he implemented a program that reassigned or even removed officers who were skeptical of his plans and also promoted younger officers who stood behind Guzmán. This new program also called for an institution for more formal training for officers and personnel that enlisted in the armed forces. This program proved to be a great success, and it was a major part of the legacy Guzmán left behind.


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