Rubén Armando Costas Aguilera (born 6 October 1955) is a
Bolivia
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n politician and the prefect and then
governor of
Santa Cruz Department in
Bolivia
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, flag_alt = Horizontal tricolor (red, yellow, and green from top to bottom) with the coat of arms of Bolivia in the center
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from 2006 to 2021, and also the leader of the
Democrat Social Movement (MDS).
Early life and career
Rubén Costas was born on 6 October 1955 in
Santa Cruz de la Sierra to Rubén Costas Menacho and Guedy Aguilera de Costas. He is married to Sonia Vincentti Égüez. Originally an agricultural technician by profession, he later became leader of the Bolivian Cattlemen's Confederation, the Milk Producers Association, the Eastern Agricultural Chamber. From 2003 to 2004, he was the leader of the Santa Cruz Civic Committee.
Prefect and Governor of Santa Cruz (2006–present)
Costas successfully ran in the
2005 general elections for the office of Prefect of Santa Cruz on behalf of the Autonomy for Bolivia party. This election was the result of several negotiations and large, peaceful public demonstrations in Santa Cruz demanding that prefects, the highest office in each of the nine departments, be elected by popular vote. Prior to that, the provisions of the 1967 Constitution stated that prefects were to be appointed by the president. Due to popular demand and negotiations led by Costas, the
Bolivian National Congress approved Law 3015 to formalize the prefect election process. This was a major victory for the autonomy movement, born out of the eastern region of Bolivia, that fought for decentralization of political power.
Prefect of Santa Cruz (2006–2010)
Following the 2005 elections, Costas became the first democratically elected Prefect of Santa Cruz, being inaugurated on 22 January 2006. In 2008, he participated, along with all other departmental governors, in that year's
no confidence referendum, with 66% of voters electing to keep him in office. Costas remained in office until 5 January 2010 when, following the promulgation of
2009 Constitution, he resigned to run for governor (the same office, renamed under the new constitution) in that year's
regional elections.
Governor of Santa Cruz (2010–2021)
Costas ran as a member of the
Truth and Social Democracy
''VERDES'' (short for ''Verdad y Democracia Social'', 'Truth and Social Democracy'; the acronym means Greens) was a liberal-conservative political party in the Department of Santa Cruz, Bolivia founded in 2009 and was led by Rubén Costas. In the ...
(VERDES) party, of which he was the leader, winning 54% of the popular vote and returning to the leadership of Santa Cruz on 30 May 2010. Since he took office, Costas remained strongly critical of the government of President
Evo Morales because of Morales's opposition to decentralization.
On 12 April 2011, Costas was shot in the left
temporal bone in the Blacutt Square of Santa Cruz de la Sierra after attempted to prevent the assault of a woman by two assailants on motorcycles. The injury was non-lethal and he was discharged a few weeks after the incident.
Ahead of the
2014 general elections, Costas merged his VERDES party with Renewing Freedom and Democracy (LIDER), and
Popular Consensus (CP), forming the
Democrat Social Movement (MDS). At the party's first National Congress on 15 December 2013, Costas was chosen as its presidential candidate. However, the party withdrew from the elections, opting instead to ally with
Samuel Doria Medina's National Unity Front. Instead, Costas successfully ran for a second term in the
2015 regional elections. On 11 December 2014, Costas resigned in favor of Assemblywoman Ruth Lozada in order to qualify as a gubernatorial candidate. Upon winning, he was inaugurated again on 31 May 2015.
After more than 14 years in power in Santa Cruz, Costas announced that he would not run for reelection nor run for the office of Mayor of Santa Cruz de la Sierra in the following year's
regional elections. The MDS did not present its own gubernatorial candidate to succeed Costas, instead choosing to endorse
Creemos leader
Luis Fernando Camacho, who ultimately won in the first round.
References
External links
Declarations the Rubén Costas, 4 de mayo de 2008Autonomy for the rich ones, revolution for the poor men 1Autonomy for the rich ones, revolution for the poor men 2
{{DEFAULTSORT:Costas, Rubén
1955 births
Living people
21st-century Bolivian politicians
Autonomy for Bolivia politicians
Bolivian environmentalists
People from Santa Cruz de la Sierra