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Manuel José Ossandón

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In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Ossandón and the second or maternal family name is Irarrázabal.
Manuel José Ossandón Irarrázabal
Senator of Santiago
In office
11 March 2014 – 11 March 2030
Preceded byEna von Baer
Mayor of Puente Alto
In office
6 December 2000 – 6 December 2012
Preceded bySergio Roubilard
Succeeded byGermán Codina
Mayor of Pirque
In office
6 September 1992 – 6 December 2000
Preceded byHernan Prieto
Succeeded byAlejandro Rosales
Personal details
Born (1962-08-24) 24 August 1962 (age 62)
Viña del Mar, Chile
Political partyRenovación Nacional (2004–2016)
ChildrenEight (among them, Manuel)
RelativesXimena Ossandón (sister)
OccupationPolitician
Professionagricultural technician

Manuel José Ossandón Irarrázabal, colloquially "Cote Ossandón", (born 24 August 1962 in Viña del Mar, Región de Valparaíso) is an agricultural technician and a senator of Chile for the 8th Senatorial District. He was elected during the parliamentarian elections of 2013, for the period 2014–2022. Member of Chilean center-right party Renovación Nacional (RN). He renounced in July 2016.

Ossandón was one of the four most popular candidates in Chile's 2017 presidential election and ranked as the second most-voted senator in the 2013 parliamentary elections. In 2015, he was recognized as the most prolific senator in the country.

Early life

Ossandón was born in Chile in Viña del Mar and raised in Pirque. After his studies, he worked as an agricultural engineer. In the countryside, he witnessed high rates of rural poverty and inequalities there and throughout Chile.

Political career

Beginnings

He started in politics as mayor of Pirque's municipality from year 1992 to 2000 and mayor of Puente Alto from 2000 to 2012.

A self-described social Christian, Ossandón has been focused during all his years as a politician fighting for poverty reduction and for increasing the quality of life of Chileans. He is very well known as well for fighting against Chilean political corruption, social injustices and enterprise collusions.

By the time he turned 30, he decided to run for mayor in the rural town of Pirque, a suburb of Santiago. He won with 21.86% of the votes and was re-elected for the next term, garnering 64.52% of the vote. In 2000, he decided to run for mayor in the largest municipality of Chile, Puente Alto. He won with 45% of the vote, was re-elected in 2004 with 60% , then re-elected again in 2008 with 70%.

As Senator

His years as mayor helped Ossandón gain increasing popularity and helped him to get elected as a senator of Chile. He ran for president in 2017, obtaining 27,6% in the presidential primaries (Sebastian Piñera won the candidacy with 57,5% of the vote).

Ossandón has established a reputation as a leading progressive voice on issues such as campaign finance reform and combating political and business corruption.

Actually, he's candidate to the primaries elections for the "Chile Vamos" coalition and the most popular candidate of the center right according to the CEP poll of 2016.

In May 2020 he contracted COVID-19 and recovered the following month. An opponent of same-sex marriage, he criticized President Sebastián Piñera for pushing the bill legalizing it in the Chilean Congress, calling it a "low blow, it was a tremendous stab for many people who have a more conservative position, just before entering into an election, which was not necessary."

References

  1. "Manuel Ossandón: "Renuncio a RN para tener la libertad de ir a primarias o a primera vuelta"". La Tercera. 2016-07-17. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  2. "Senador Ossandón destacado como el parlamentario que más proyectos presentó durante el 2015". La Tercera. 2015-12-30. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  3. "Ossandón presenta proyecto para terminar con el monopolio de Transbank". La Tercera. 2017-04-27. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  4. "Ossandón se reúne con contralor general y anuncia sus 10 medidas presidenciales contra la corrupción". Emol.com. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  5. "Estudio Nacional de Opinión Pública, Noviembre-Diciembre 2016 - Centro de Estudios Públicos". Cepchile.cl. 2017-01-05. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  6. "Manuel José Ossandón es el tercer senador contagiado con coronavirus". El Dínamo (in Spanish). 18 May 2020.
  7. "Senador Manuel José Ossandón da positivo a test Covid-19 y se convierte en el tercer parlamentario contagiado". El Mostrador (in Spanish). 18 May 2020.
  8. "Al rojo la polémica por el matrimonio igualitario en Chile Vamos: Ossandón califica el anuncio como "una puñalada tremenda" del Presidente Piñera". El Mostrador. 2021-06-21. Retrieved 2022-02-08.
Members of the Senate of Chile
  1. José Miguel Insulza (PS)
  2. José Durana (UDI)
  3. Jorge Soria (Ind)
  4. Luz Ebensperger (UDI)
  5. Pedro Araya Guerrero (Ind)
  6. Esteban Velásquez (FRVS)
  7. Paulina Núñez (RN)
  8. Yasna Provoste (DC)
  9. Rafael Prohens (RN)
  10. Daniel Núñez (PC)
  11. Matías Walker (DEM)
  12. Sergio Gahona (UDI)
  13. Francisco Chahuán (RN)
  14. Kenneth Pugh Olavarría (RN)
  15. Ricardo Lagos Weber (PPD)
  16. Isabel Allende (PS)
  17. Juan Ignacio Latorre (RD)
  18. Manuel José Ossandón (RN)
  19. Luciano Cruz-Coke (EVO)
  20. Claudia Pascual (PC)
  21. Fabiola Campillai (Ind)
  22. Rojo Edwards (Ind)
  23. Alejandra Sepúlveda (FRVS)
  24. Javier Macaya (UDI)
  25. Juan Luis Castro (PS)
  26. Juan Castro Prieto (Ind)
  27. Rodrigo Galilea (RN)
  28. Juan Antonio Coloma Correa (UDI)
  29. Ximena Rincón (DEM)
  30. Paulina Vodanovic (PS)
  31. Sebastián Keitel (EVO)
  32. Enrique van Rysselberghe (UDI)
  33. Gastón Saavedra (PS)
  34. Loreto Carvajal (PPD)
  35. Gustavo Sanhueza (UDI)
  36. Felipe Kast (EVO)
  37. Francisco Huenchumilla (DC)
  38. Jaime Quintana (PPD)
  39. José García Ruminot (RN)
  40. Carmen Gloria Aravena (REP)
  41. Alfonso de Urresti (PS)
  42. María José Gatica (RN)
  43. Rabindranath Quinteros (PS)
  44. Iván Flores (DC)
  45. Iván Moreira (UDI)
  46. Fidel Espinoza (PS)
  47. Carlos Kuschel (RN)
  48. Ximena Órdenes (Ind)
  49. Karim Bianchi (Ind)
  50. Alejandro Kusanovic (Ind)

External links

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