Germán Busch

Víctor Germán Busch Becerra (23 March 1903 – 23 August 1939) was a Bolivian military officer and statesman who served as the 36th president of Bolivia from 1937 to 1939. Prior to his presidency, he served as the Chief of the General Staff and was the Supreme Leader of the Legion of Veterans, a veterans' organization founded by him after his service in the Chaco War.

Germán Busch
Official photograph with the Presidential Medal.
36th President of Bolivia
In office
13 July 1937  23 August 1939
Junta: 13 July 1937 – 28 May 1938
Vice PresidentVacant (1937–1938; 1939)
Enrique Baldivieso (1938–1939)
Preceded byDavid Toro
Succeeded byCarlos Quintanilla (provisional)
In office
17 May 1936  22 May 1936
Provisional
Preceded byJosé Luis Tejada Sorzano
Succeeded byDavid Toro
Supreme Leader of the Legion of Veterans
In office
10 July 1937  23 August 1939
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byBernardino Bilbao Rioja
Personal details
Born
Víctor Germán Busch Becerra

(1903-03-23)23 March 1903
San Javier, Ñuflo de Chávez, Santa Cruz, or El Carmen, Iténez, Beni, Bolivia
Died23 August 1939(1939-08-23) (aged 36)
La Paz, Bolivia
Cause of deathSuicide
Spouse
Matilde Carmona
(m. 1928)
Children
  • Germán
  • Orlando
  • Waldo
  • Gloria
Parent(s)Pablo Busch
Raquel Becerra
RelativesAlberto Natusch (nephew)
EducationMilitary College of the Army
Signature
NicknameCamba Busch
Military service
Allegiance Bolivia
Branch/service Bolivian Army
Years of service1927–1937
RankLieutenant colonel
UnitCampero Infantry Regiment
Carabineros Corps
Ingavi Cavalry Regiment
Commands"Lanza" 6th Cavalry Regiment
4th Cavalry Brigade
Battles/wars
Awards Order of the Condor of the Andes

Busch was born in either El Carmen de Iténez or San Javier and was raised in Trinidad. He attended the Military College of the Army and served with distinction in the Chaco War. For his actions, he rose to prominence among the high command of the armed forces, participating in the military-led ousters of presidents Daniel Salamanca in 1934 and José Luis Tejada Sorzano in 1936. The latter propelled his mentor, Colonel David Toro, to the presidency of a military junta of which Busch was a member. On 13 July 1937, Busch orchestrated a soft-coup which forced Toro's resignation, elevating himself to the presidency of the junta.

A war hero, drawn in by the reformist social movements of the time, Busch spearheaded the development of Toro's military socialist ideology, convening the 1938 National Convention which legally elected him president and promulgated the 1938 Political Constitution, hailed as a "Social Constitution" as it established the State's right to the country's natural wealth, alluded to the social function of property, and recognized the communal lands of indigenous Bolivians. However, his political inexperience and accustomation to rigid military structure weakened his ability to lead the disparate factions of the left-wing movements and led him to ultimately suspend the legislature and declare dictatorial rule in 1939. During this time, he issued a profusion of executive decrees including a new labor and school code and the mining currency law, the latter of which proved to be the most popular of his policies though it gained him the ire of the Rosca, the country's powerful mining oligarchy.

By the end of 1939, pressure from resurgent conservative parties, a corruption scandal, and a deepening personal depression led Busch to commit suicide on 23 August 1939, bringing an end to the era of military socialism in Bolivia. An enigmatic character who came from outside the political realm, he was wrapped in legend and controversy, even about his birthplace. His sudden and unexpected death in office is still disputed as either suicide or an assassination.

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