Ricardo de la Espriella

Ricardo de la Espriella
De la Espriella in 2010
President of Panama
In office
31 July 1982 – 13 February 1984
Vice PresidentJorge Illueca (1982–1984)
Preceded byArístides Royo
Succeeded byJorge Illueca
Vice President of Panama
In office
11 October 1978 – 31 July 1982
Preceded byGerardo González Vernaza
Succeeded byJorge Illueca
Personal details
BornRicardo de la Espriella Toral
(1934-09-05) 5 September 1934
PartyDemocratic Revolutionary Party
SpouseMercedes Martinez
Children4
Alma materPanama University

Ricardo de la Espriella Toral (born 5 September 1934) is a Panamanian politician who was the President of Panama from 31 July 1982 to 13 February 1984.

Early career

Ricardo de la Espriella is a Stanford-trained economist. Espriella was the general manager of National Bank of Panama from 1970 to 1978,[1] when he became Vice President of Panama in 1978. This made him the designated successor to President Arístides Royo in 1982 when Royo was forced out by the National Guard, then controlled by General Rubén Darío Paredes.[2]

As vice president, De la Espriella was also head of the National Finance Commission (Comision Financiera Nacional or CFN) before Royo's resignation.[3] Being a competent financial manager, he posed no threat to the dominant influence of the National Guard, and wasted no time in referring to them as "a partner in power".[2] Thus, de la Espriella was a type of puppet president, first under General Paredes and later Manuel Noriega once Paredes resigned in 1983.

Presidency

When De la Espriella took the oath as Interim President, Paredes immediately decreed that certain Panamanian newspapers be shut down including "La Prensa", which had built a strong reputation for opposition to the ruling military dictatorship. Paredes gave orders to attack the newspaper which resulted in smashing the newspaper's windows and typewriters as well as injury to the one of the press operators and the director of the Central American Institute of Business Administration, who was delivering a press release from his institution and whose suit and tie caused him to be mistaken for the "La Prensa" director.

De la Espriella immediately formed a new cabinet that included independents and members of the Liberal Party and the PRD; Jorge Illueca, Royo's foreign minister, became the new vice president. Meanwhile, Colonel Armando Contreras became chief of staff of the National Guard, until December 1982, when Noriega took over that position.

The country had only a "democratic façade."

In July, 1983, De la Espriella and three other leaders of Central and South American countries, known as the Contadora Four, met and authored the Cancún Declaration on Peace in Central America[4], sending the text to the UN as well as to President Ronald Reagan. On 26 July 1983, Reagan wrote a brief letter to each of the Contadora Four[5], thanking and congratulating them and sharing the principles the United States held must be part of any long term solution.

De la Espriella remained public and appeared in Time magazine, Newsweek, and other magazines - one of which printed a 1983 photo of him sitting next to then-Vice President George H. W. Bush who sat alongside a young, uniformed Manuel Noriega.

In 1984, De la Espriella was pressured by Noriega and his reorganized National Defense Forces to reshuffle his cabinet to include supporters of Nicolás Ardito Barletta.[6] When he seemingly balked at that, he was summoned away from his family and flown to a meeting in the capital with Noriega and Colonel Roberto Díaz Herrera[6] after which De la Espriella resigned abruptly and without any public explanation.[7]

References

  1. ^ Porras, Jorge Conte (23 May 1980). "Balance general de valores humanos: Banco Nacional de Panamá (1904-1979)". El Banco – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b Hanratty, Dennis M.; Meditz, Sandra W., eds. (1987). "Panama: A Country Study; Torrijos's Sudden Death". countrystudies.us/panama/. Library of Congress. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
  3. ^ "POR EL CUAL SE CREA LA COMISION FINANCIERA NACIONAL, COMO ORGANISMO ASESOR DEL ORGANO EJECUTIVO, EN LOS ASUNTOS FINANCIEROS DEL GOBIERNO NACIONAL" (PDF). Justia (in Spanish). Ministerio de la Presidencia.
  4. ^ Betancur, Belisario; Herrera Campins, Luis; La Espriella, Ricardo de; La Madrid Hurtado, Miguel de. "Cancún Declaration on Peace in Central America". A/38/303, S/15877, 1983 https://digitallibrary.un.org/nanna/record/49467/files/A_38_303_S_15877-EN.pdf
  5. ^ Reagan, Ronald (26 July 1983), "Letter to President Ricardo de la Espriella of Panama on the Situation in Central America", Letter to Ricardo de la Espriella, retrieved 26 April 2026
  6. ^ a b Koster, R.M.; Sánchez, Guillermo (1990). In the Time of the Tyrants (1st ed.). W.W. Norton. pp. 302–303. ISBN 0393026965. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
  7. ^ Meislin, Richard J. (14 February 1984). "Panama's President Abruptly Resigns". New York Times. Retrieved 26 April 2026.