Isabel Allende (politician)

The Honourable
María Isabel Allende
President of the Chilean Senate
In office
11 March 2014  11 March 2015
Deputy Eugenio Tuma
Preceded by Jorge Pizarro
Succeeded by Patricio Walker
Senator for Atacama
Assumed office
11 March 2010
Preceded by Ricardo Núñez
Leader of the Socialist Party of Chile
Assumed office
17 May 2015
Preceded by Osvaldo Andrade
President of the Chilean Chamber of Deputies
In office
18 March 2003  16 March 2004
Preceded by Adriana Muñoz
Succeeded by Pablo Lorenzini
Member of the Chilean Chamber of Deputies
In office
11 March 1994  11 March 2010
Personal details
Born (1945-01-18) 18 January 1945
Santiago, Chile
Nationality Chilean
Political party Socialist Party of Chile
Children 2
Parents Salvador Allende
Hortensia Bussi
Relatives Allende family
Alma mater University of Chile
Profession Sociologist
Website Official website

Isabel Allende Bussi (/ɑːˈjɛnd/;[1] born 18 January 1945) is a Chilean Socialist Party politician and the daughter of former president of Chile Salvador Allende, and his wife, Hortensia Bussi. From 1994 to 2010 she was a deputy and in March 2010 she became a Senator for the Atacama Region. On 28 February 2014, Allende was selected as president of the Senate, as of 11 March 2014,[2] making her the first woman president of the body in Chilean history.

Biography

She went to the Maisonette College, and unlike her sisters, was initially attracted to the Catholic Church and received her first communion. In 1962, at the age of 17 she began studying sociology, and joined the university's socialist brigade. Five years later she accompanied her father to the congress of the Socialist Party in Chile.

Her first marriage with Sergio Meza, did not last for long, but they had a son, Gonzalo [3]. With her second husband, Romilio Tambutti, she had a daughter named Marcia.

On 11 September 1973, the day of the military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet, Isabel was the last person to enter the presidential palace. After the military began to bomb the presidential palace, and the outcome was already clear, her father ordered the women to leave.

Isabel obtained political asylum in Mexico, with her mother and sister, where she spent sixteen years in exile, before returning to Chile in 1989, in the final stretch of the military regime.

On returning to her homeland, Allende began a successful political career; after Chile's return to democracy in 1990, she was elected as a member of the Chamber of Deputies, serving as its President between 2003 and 2004, becoming the second woman to do so after Adriana Muñoz.

On 16 December 2010, her son Gonzalo Meza Allende committed suicide after suffering depression.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. "Allende". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. Isabel Allende chosen as first woman to lead Chile's senate, Associated Press, The Guardian, 28 February 2014
  3. http://www.caras.cl/politica/isabel-allende-bussi-su-historia-secreta/
  4. "Conmoción política por trágica muerte de hijo de la senadora Isabel Allende". La Segunda (in Spanish). December 16, 2010. Retrieved March 22, 2018.
  5. Kirschbaum, Ricardo, ed. (December 17, 2010). "Se suicidó el nieto de Allende". Clarín (in Spanish) (25971). Retrieved March 22, 2018.

Media related to Isabel Allende at Wikimedia Commons

  • Biography from the Chilean National Congress
  • New York Times on exhumation of Salvador Allende


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