Oscar Raúl Aguad | |
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Minister of Communications of Argentina | |
Assumed office December 10, 2005 |
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President | Mauricio Macri |
National Deputy from Córdoba Province |
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Assumed office December 10, 2005 |
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Federal Interventor in Corrientes Province |
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In office March 20, 2001 – December 10, 2001 |
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Preceded by | Ramón Mestre |
Succeeded by | Ricardo Colombi (Governor) |
Personal details | |
Born |
Córdoba, Argentina |
May 7, 1950
Political party | Radical Civic Union |
Spouse(s) | María Dolores Albarenque |
Alma mater | National University of Córdoba |
Profession | Lawyer |
Oscar Raúl Aguad (born May 7, 1950) is an Argentine UCR politician. He was elected to the Lower House of Congress, where he became President of the UCR caucus and Vice President of the Chamber.
Aguad was born in Córdoba to Hilda Beily and Raúl Aguad, in 1950. His father had, in the 1930s, established the first piano retailer in Córdoba and later opened an art gallery. He enrolled at the National University of Córdoba, and earned a Law Degree with a specialization in corporate, tax, and criminal law. He married María Dolores Albarenque in 1976, and they had five daughters.
He was brought on as an associate by José Severo Caballero, a Córdoba jurist who would be appointed President of the Argentine Supreme Court in 1983 by President Raúl Alfonsín. Following elections that year in which the UCR swept both national and Córdoba offices, Aguad was appointed Chief of Staff by Córdoba Mayor Ramón Mestre. Aguad served in the board of directors of La Voz del Interior (the leading Córdoba news daily), as well as of the University of Córdoba Foundation. He established Amparo Legal (Legal Recourse), a legal assistance office, in 1994, and later a law office.
Ramón Mestre would be both a friend and political mentor to Aguad. Mestre was appointed to head a Federal intervention of politically troubled Corrientes Province by President Fernando de la Rúa in 1999, and recommended Aguad for the post of Mayor of Corrientes. The former was transferred to the post of Interior Minister by the President in March 2001, and Aguad was named as his successor. He presided over new provincial elections, and on December 10, was succeeded by a duly elected governor.