Rómulo Betancourt (born February 22, 1908, Guatire, Miranda, Venezuela—died September 28, 1981, New York City, New York, U.S.) was a Venezuelan politician who served as president of Venezuela (1945–48; 1959–64). Left wing and anticommunist, he pursued policies of agrarian reform, industrial development, and popular participation in government.
While a student at the University of Caracas, Betancourt was jailed (1928) for his activities against the dictatorial regime of Juan Vicente Gómez. Released after a few weeks, he continued to demonstrate against Gómez and was exiled, remaining abroad until 1936. During this period he wrote a book about his experiences and briefly joined the Communist Party in Costa Rica.
He returned to Venezuela in 1936 but was again exiled in 1939; he was permitted to return in 1941, in which year he helped found Acción Democrática (AD), a left-wing anticommunist party that came to power in 1945 following a coup against the government of Gen. Isaías Medina Angarita.
Appointed provisional president after the coup, Betancourt established a new constitution and inaugurated a program of moderate social reform, providing land for the peasants and exercising greater control over the petroleum industry. His elected successor, Rómulo Gallegos, was installed in February 1948 but was deposed in a military coup led by Marcos Pérez Jiménez in November. After the coup, Betancourt went into exile once again.
He spent the next 10 years in the United States, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Costa Rica, directing the remnants of the outlawed AD. Pérez Jiménez was overthrown in 1958, and Betancourt returned to Venezuela, made peace with other democratic elements, and was elected president. Harassed by pro-Cuban communists on one side and frightened conservatives on the other, he steered a middle course, passing an agrarian law to expropriate large estates, initiating an ambitious program of public works, and fostering industrial development to prevent complete dependence on petroleum revenues. He left office in 1964 and lived for eight years in self-imposed exile in Switzerland, finally returning to Venezuela in 1972. Rather than stand in Venezuela’s 1973 presidential elections, he backed Carlos Andrés Pérez as the AD candidate. Although he later broke with Andrés Pérez, he continued to be a force in the AD party. At the time of his death, he was visiting New York City.