Nayib Bukele

Nayib Bukele
A vertical upper-body portrait of Nayib Bukele smiling, facing the camera, and wearing a business suit and the presidential sash of El Salvador
Official portrait, 2019
43rd President of El Salvador
Assumed office
1 June 2019[a]
Vice PresidentFélix Ulloa
Preceded bySalvador Sánchez Cerén
13th Mayor of San Salvador
In office
1 May 2015 – 30 April 2018
Preceded byNorman Quijano
Succeeded byErnesto Muyshondt
Mayor of Nuevo Cuscatlán
In office
1 May 2012 – 30 April 2015
Preceded byÁlvaro Rodríguez
Succeeded byMichelle Sol
Personal details
Born
Nayib Armando Bukele Ortez

(1981-07-24) 24 July 1981 (age 42)
San Salvador, El Salvador
Political partyNuevas Ideas (since 2017)
Other political
affiliations
Spouse
(m. 2014)
Children2
Parent
EducationCentral American University (no degree)
OccupationPolitician, businessman
CabinetCabinet of Nayib Bukele
SignatureA graphic of Nayib Bukele's signature

Nayib Armando Bukele Ortez (Spanish pronunciation: [naˈʝiβ buˈkele]; born 24 July 1981) is a Salvadoran politician and businessman currently serving as the 43rd president of El Salvador since 1 June 2019. He is the first Salvadoran president since 1989 who was not elected as a candidate of one of the country's two major political parties: the right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) and the left-wing Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), of which Bukele was formerly a member.

Beginning in 1999, Bukele worked at an advertising company owned by his father and also established his own advertising company. Both his and his father's companies advertised election campaigns for the FMLN. In 2011, Bukele announced that he would enter politics, and in 2012, he officially became a member of the FMLN. That year, he was elected as the mayor of Nuevo Cuscatlán and served until 2015. That same year, Bukele was elected as the mayor of San Salvador and served until 2018. In 2017, Bukele was ousted from the FMLN, and shortly afterwards, he founded the Nuevas Ideas political party with which he sought to pursue a presidential campaign in 2019. After the Supreme Electoral Court (TSE) refused to register his party, Bukele ran for president with the Grand Alliance for National Unity (GANA) and won with 53 percent of the vote.

In July 2019, Bukele implemented the Territorial Control Plan, an anti-gang program that sought to reduce the country's homicide rate of 38 per 100,000 people in 2019. Homicides decreased by 50 percent during Bukele's first year in office, which he attributed to the Territorial Control Plan. However, El Faro digital newspaper and the United States Department of State accused Bukele's government of secretly negotiating with gangs to reduce the homicide rate. After 87 people were killed by gangs during a single weekend in March 2022, Bukele initiated a nationwide crackdown on gangs. This has resulted in the arrests of over 79,000 people with alleged gang affiliations as of 2 April 2024, with over 12,000 of them incarcerated at the newly constructed Terrorism Confinement Center. The country's homicide rate decreased to 2.4 homicides per 100,000 in 2023, the second lowest in the Americas after Canada. In 2021, Bukele passed a law which declared bitcoin as legal tender in El Salvador, and he has promoted plans to build a Bitcoin City powered by geothermal energy to mine bitcoin. In June 2023, the Legislative Assembly approved Bukele's proposals to reduce the number of municipalities from 262 to 44 and the number of seats in the Legislative Assembly from 84 to 60.

Politicians, activists, and journalists have accused Bukele of governing in an authoritarian and autocratic manner. In February 2020 Bukele ordered 40 soldiers into the Legislative Assembly building to intimidate lawmakers to approve a US$109 million loan for the Territorial Control Plan. In May 2021, after Nuevas Ideas won a supermajority in the Legislative Assembly in that year's legislative election, Bukele's allies in the legislature voted to remove and replace the attorney general and all five justices of the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice. Bukele has attacked journalists and news media outlets on social media and has implemented laws that critics claim censor the press. Bukele ran for re-election in the 2024 presidential election and won with over 85% of the vote, after the Supreme Court reinterpreted the constitution's ban on consecutive re-election. Before Bukele's presidency, he considered himself to be a member of the "radical left". Since becoming president, he has not identified with any political ideology. During Bukele's presidency, political analysts have described him as a populist and a conservative. Bukele retains high job approval ratings and is highly popular both within El Salvador and across Latin America.

  1. ^ "Designada del Presidente ya Sanciona Decretos como Encargada del Despacho" [Presidential Designate Now Sanctions Decrees as In Charge with the Office]. El Mundo (in Spanish). 14 December 2023. Archived from the original on 14 December 2023. Retrieved 14 December 2023.


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