Luis Echeverría Álvarez
- Born:
- January 17, 1922, Mexico City, Mexico
- Died:
- July 8, 2022, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico (aged 100)
- Also Known As:
- Luis Echeverría
- Title / Office:
- president (1970-1976), Mexico
Luis Echeverría Álvarez (born January 17, 1922, Mexico City, Mexico—died July 8, 2022, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico) was a Mexican politician who was president of Mexico from 1970 to 1976.
Echeverría became the private secretary of the president of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in 1940 and received a law degree from the National Autonomous University of Mexico in 1945. He rose rapidly in political circles and held several important posts in government and the PRI prior to being appointed secretary of the interior in 1964 by Pres. Gustavo Díaz Ordaz. He was severely criticized for his harsh handling of the 1968 student demonstrations that culminated in the “Tlatelolco massacre,” in which more than 300 demonstrators were killed or wounded and thousands arrested.
After becoming president, Echeverría moved sharply to the left. He released most of the prisoners arrested in 1968, redistributed millions of acres among the landless peasantry, expanded social security, housing, and transportation programs, and poured huge sums of money into public works. Reversing an earlier stand, he introduced a national family-planning program to reduce population growth. His administration was plagued by runaway inflation, high unemployment, and illiteracy, and his leftist economic proposals, including the government purchase of many privately owned enterprises, alienated business interests, causing reduced domestic investment. A declining balance of trade forced the devaluation of the peso by 50 percent in 1976, producing insecurity and antagonism among Echeverría’s middle-class supporters. In foreign policy, Echeverría opened diplomatic relations with China and supported Latin American solidarity. After leaving office in 1976, he served as ambassador to Australia and New Zealand (1977–80) under his successor, Pres. José López Portillo.
In the 1990s Echeverría began to be formally investigated for his involvement in both the 1968 massacre and the killing of more than a dozen protesters by police in 1971. He later faced genocide charges for both incidents, but, after numerous legal maneuvers, a federal court in 2009 ruled that Echeverría could not be tried for the killings.