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Juan Luis Manzur
Juan Luis Manzur
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Juan Luis Manzur (born 8 January 1969) is an Argentine surgeon and politician currently serving as a National Senator for Tucumán Province. A member of the Justicialist Party, he previously served as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers from 2021 to 2023, under President Alberto Fernández. He previously served as Minister of Health of Argentina from 2009 to 2015, and as Governor of Tucumán from 2015 to 2021.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Manzur was born in San Miguel de Tucumán to a Maronite Catholic father from Lebanon and an Argentine mother. He received a medical degree from the University of Tucumán and completed his residency at the public Álvarez Hospital, in Buenos Aires. Manzur later received a master's degree in Health Systems and Services Administration from the University of Buenos Aires.[1]

Political career

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Following a stint as Vice Minister of Health for the Province of San Luis, in 2002 he was named Public Health Secretary of the District of La Matanza, a western, mainly blue-collar suburb of the Argentine capital. Recommended by the National Health Minister, Ginés González García, Manzur was appointed Health Minister of Tucumán Province by the new Governor, José Alperovich, in 2003. Manzur soon earned plaudits in his post, which oversaw public health in one of Argentina's least-developed provinces.[2] One widely used yardstick of public health, the infant mortality rate, fell from 23 per 1,000 births (40% above the national average) in 2003, to 13 in 2006 (matching the national average).[3][4] The perinatal mortality rate (a late fetal death, or of an infant under one week old) likewise fell during the same period in Tucumán from 24 to 18 per 1,000 births.[3][5] These news helped Manzur secure Governor Alperovich's nod to be a running mate for his successful, 2007 bid for re-election.

Health minister

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Manzur was sworn in on July 1, the day after a public health emergency was declared over a worsening H1N1 virus ("swine flu") epidemic, which had claimed 44 fatalities by the time he was sworn in.[6] His tenure would thereafter be focused on expanding childhood immunizations, childhood preventive medicine, diagnostic care against coeliac disease and HPV, mobile health, access to organ transplants, and smoking cessation programs.[7][8] Staunch opposition from the powerful Roman Catholic Church in Argentina forced Manzur to reverse steps toward protecting women's reproductive rights, cancelling proposals in 2010 that would have guarantee access to legal abortions.[9]

He stepped down as Health Minister in February 2015 to return to the post of Vice Governor of Tucumán, and was expected to run to succeed Governor Alperovich in provincial elections later in the year.[10]

Cabinet Chief

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On 20 September 2021, Manzur was appointed Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers by President Alberto Fernández in replacement of Santiago Cafiero. Manzur's appointment was part of a cabinet reshuffle following the government's poor showings in the 2021 legislative primary elections.[11] Manzur did not resign from his position as governor of Tucumán, instead taking a leave of office while vice governor Osvaldo Jaldo assumed interim executive powers.[12]

References

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from Grokipedia

Juan Luis Manzur (born 8 January 1969) is an Argentine surgeon and Justicialist politician serving as a National Senator for Tucumán Province since December 2023. A graduate of the National University of Tucumán's School of Medicine, Manzur specialized in general surgery, occupational medicine, and legal medicine before entering politics. He held the position of National Minister of Health from July 2009 to December 2011, during which his administration expanded Argentina's vaccination calendar by incorporating six new vaccines. Manzur subsequently served as Governor of Tucumán Province from 2015 to 2021, focusing on infrastructure and economic policies in the sugar-producing region, and as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers under President Alberto Fernández from September 2021 until his resignation in February 2023 to pursue provincial leadership roles. As a prominent Peronist leader, he has presided over the provincial Justicialist Party branch and contributed to national coalition efforts within the Frente de Todos alliance.

Early life and education

Upbringing and family background

Juan Luis Manzur was born on January 8, 1969, in , the capital of , . He grew up in a modest middle-class family in the province. Manzur's father was a Lebanese immigrant and Maronite Catholic, while his mother was Argentine of criollo descent. The family maintained strong connections to Tucumán's Maronite Catholic community, with the parish of Nuestro Señor del Milagro y San Marón serving as their primary place of worship. Manzur has emphasized his Lebanese Maronite heritage in public statements, particularly during commemorations of the community's milestones in .

Medical training and early career

Manzur earned his from the Faculty of Medicine at the National University of Tucumán, graduating as a Doctor in Medicine in 1992. Following graduation, he completed a residency in at the Hospital General de Agudos Dr. Teodoro Álvarez in , qualifying as a specialist in . He later obtained specializations in and legal medicine, alongside master's degrees in and in the administration of health services and systems from the . In his early professional career, Manzur held administrative roles in prior to entering provincial politics. He served as Secretary of Health for the Municipality of in from 2001 to 2002, and as Vice-Minister of Health in . These positions involved oversight of local health services and policy implementation, building on his clinical training in and administration.

Political career

Provincial roles and rise in Tucumán politics

Manzur entered Tucumán provincial politics in upon his appointment as Minister of Health by newly elected José Alperovich, a position he held until 2007. In this role, he oversaw the implementation of policies aimed at expanding access to medical services in the province, including campaigns for vaccination and disease prevention, which helped build his profile within the Peronist Party's local machinery. His tenure aligned with Alperovich's consolidation of power in Tucumán, a province characterized by strong Peronist dominance and centralized control over patronage networks. In the 2007 provincial elections, Manzur was selected as the running mate for Alperovich's re-election bid, securing the governorship for the term spanning December 10, 2007, to December 10, 2011. He was re-elected to the same position in 2011, serving until December 10, 2015, during which time he maintained a low-profile but loyal supporting role to the governor, focusing on health-related provincial initiatives and party organization. This dual-term vice governorship solidified Manzur's standing as Alperovich's key ally and potential successor within Tucumán's Peronist structure, amid a political landscape where the party leveraged clientelist practices and limited opposition influence to retain control. Manzur's ascent reflected the dynamics of Tucumán politics, where alignment with the dominant Peronist faction under Alperovich—rooted in the province's economic reliance on state employment and agricultural subsidies—proved essential for advancement. By 2015, following Alperovich's decision to step aside due to health issues and term limits, Manzur emerged as the faction's candidate for , winning the election with 51.2% of the vote against opposition challenger José Cano. His prior roles had positioned him to inherit the party's organizational apparatus, including control over the (PJ) in Tucumán, which he later led as president.

National Minister of Health (2011–2015)

Juan Luis Manzur served as National Minister of Health from July 2009 until his resignation in February 2015, with the period from 2011 onward marked by intensified efforts to bolster preventive care amid the ongoing Kirchner administration's emphasis on social welfare expansion. During 2011–2015, his tenure prioritized immunization drives and maternal-infant health initiatives, building on earlier reforms to address vulnerabilities in Argentina's decentralized healthcare system. A cornerstone policy was the expansion of the Calendario Nacional de Vacunación, incorporating six additional between 2009 and 2015, including those for human papillomavirus (HPV) in 2011, for at-risk groups in 2010 (with sustained campaigns through the period), and in 2014, against , varicella, and to target diarrheal, dermatological, and invasive bacterial illnesses in infants. This brought the total to 19 by 2015, enhancing Argentina's regional standing in and contributing to reduced incidence of vaccine-preventable diseases, though coverage rates varied by due to federal-provincial dynamics. Manzur also advanced promotion via regulatory measures to curb pharmaceutical pricing, alongside free medication programs for chronic conditions like and , aiming to alleviate out-of-pocket costs in a system serving over half the population through public channels. Efforts to curb maternal and persisted, with extensions of operational plans like the 2012 prórroga of the Reducción de la Mortalidad Materno Infantil program, integrating surveillance and intervention strategies across jurisdictions. In January 2015, Manzur authorized the tender for Plan Qunita, distributing newborn kits with essentials like cribs and hygiene items to support low-income families, budgeted at approximately 400 million pesos for 140,000 units. The initiative faced scrutiny for alleged overpricing and directed favoring specific suppliers, leading to federal investigations; Manzur was indicted in 2018 for fraud against the state in relation to the licitation approval, though he maintained non-involvement in execution post-resignation, with proceedings highlighting procedural irregularities rather than direct embezzlement. These events underscored tensions in public under fiscal pressures, with critics attributing issues to centralized decision-making in a Peronist framework prone to clientelist influences, while supporters viewed them as isolated amid broader access gains.

Governorship of Tucumán (2015–2021)

Juan Luis Manzur was elected of Tucumán in the provincial elections held on , 2015, as the candidate of the Frente para la Victoria, securing victory with approximately 55% of the vote against opposition challenger José Cano's 44%, as confirmed by the definitive scrutiny that showed a margin exceeding 11 percentage points. This followed the of the August 23, 2015, due to widespread allegations of electoral irregularities, including ballot stuffing and voter , which Manzur himself acknowledged as "punctual cases" while maintaining his coalition's overall win. The post-primary protests, drawing thousands to the streets in denunciation of fraud, were met with police repression involving and , resulting in injuries and arrests. Manzur assumed office on October 30, 2015, succeeding long-term Peronist José Alperovich, with a mandate emphasizing continuity in provincial Peronist policies focused on social welfare, public employment, and infrastructure amid Tucumán's persistent poverty and reliance on state transfers. During his tenure, Manzur prioritized health sector enhancements, leveraging his medical background to expand operations and achieve sustained functionality, including the maintenance of emergency services and vaccination campaigns, though provincial health indicators like remained above national averages at around 10 per 1,000 live births by 2019. In , his administration reported success in meeting the constitutional requirement of 180 instructional days in public s annually, a benchmark often unmet in prior years due to strikes, alongside investments in infrastructure through provincial budgets supplemented by federal funds. Infrastructure efforts included road paving and projects in , funded partly by national allocations, but these were critiqued for uneven distribution favoring political strongholds and contributing to fiscal deficits exceeding 10% of provincial GDP by 2019, exacerbating debt reliance on . Economic policies under Manzur sustained Tucumán's agro-industrial base, particularly production, which accounted for over 20% of provincial GDP, through subsidies and promotion, yielding record shipments in despite national recessionary pressures. However, the governorship faced recurrent protests over salary freezes for public employees in 2020 amid inflation surpassing 40%, leading to strikes and demonstrations that prompted gubernatorial decrees for adjustments tied to productivity metrics, often viewed as mechanisms for clientelist control in a with employment comprising nearly 30% of the workforce. Manzur sought and won re-election on , 2019, under the Justicialista por Tucumán banner, obtaining roughly 50% of the vote against a fragmented opposition, in elections marred by the provincial practice of "acople" ballots linking gubernatorial and legislative races to boost turnout for incumbents. His second term, extending to December 2021, emphasized alignment with the incoming national Peronist government, including social program expansions like the Plan Accionar for poverty alleviation, though these were funded via federal transfers amid stagnant provincial growth rates below 1% annually.

Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers (2021–2023)

Juan Luis Manzur was appointed Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers by President on September 20, 2021, following a government reshuffle prompted by the Peronist coalition's defeat in the August 2021 primary elections, where the ruling secured only 30% of the vote amid economic discontent and internal tensions with . Manzur, who had been on leave from his governorship of Tucumán since taking office, replaced and assumed coordination of the executive branch, legislative liaison with , and role as government spokesperson during a period of escalating exceeding 50% annually and fiscal deficits. In this position, Manzur focused on stabilizing the administration amid factional divisions within and external pressures, including negotiations with the (IMF) that culminated in a staff-level agreement on January 28, 2022, for a US$44 billion extended fund facility to refinance prior debt while committing to gradual fiscal consolidation without immediate cuts to social spending. The deal, approved by the IMF board in March 2022, aimed to address Argentina's chronic balance-of-payments issues but faced criticism for insufficient structural reforms, as accelerated to 94.8% by year-end despite and subsidies. Manzur also managed cabinet responses to the 2022-2023 , which contracted GDP by an estimated 5.4% in the first half of 2023 and exacerbated foreign reserve shortages to negative US$11 billion. Throughout his tenure, Manzur sought to bridge rifts between the president's moderate wing and Kirchnerist hardliners, announcing in October 2022 his intent to depart early the following year to return to Tucumán politics. He resigned on February 13, 2023, to lead the campaign for Osvaldo Jaldo's gubernatorial bid in Tucumán, with succeeding him as chief amid ongoing economic volatility and ahead of midterm elections.

National Senator (2023–present)

Juan Luis Manzur was elected to the National Senate in the October 2023 midterm elections as part of the Frente de Todos alliance, representing Tucumán Province alongside senators Sandra Mendoza and Ricardo Ávila. He assumed office on December 10, 2023, for a six-year term ending in 2029, replacing outgoing senator Pablo Yedlin. As a member of the Peronist-aligned Frente Nacional y Popular bloc, Manzur has focused on opposition to the Javier Milei administration's reforms while advancing provincial and health-related priorities. Manzur has participated actively in Senate commissions, particularly those on , , and , where he has intervened in plenaries discussing public spending and healthcare policy. In August 2025, he contributed to discussions in the joint plenario of and commissions on budget allocations, emphasizing the need for sustained funding amid economic adjustments. His medical background informs his involvement in health oversight, including critiques of federal resource distribution to provinces like Tucumán. Legislatively, Manzur co-authored a March 2024 bill with Senator Sandra Mendoza to incorporate the into the obligatory medical program (PMO), aiming to expand preventive coverage against vector-borne diseases prevalent in northern . In August 2025, he supported project 1399/25, declaring national interest in CONICET's "Underwater Oases of Canyon" expedition to promote scientific research. These initiatives reflect his emphasis on public health infrastructure and , consistent with his prior executive roles. As an opposition legislator, Manzur voted against the Ley Bases in June 2024, joining Tucumán's Peronist senators in rejecting the Milei government's deregulation and privatization measures, which passed 37-36 after a tiebreaker by Vice President Victoria Villarruel. He has publicly criticized the administration's economic policies for straining provincial finances and U.S.-aligned foreign relations, advocating for Peronist alternatives to protect social programs. In this capacity, he also serves as vice president of the national Justicialist Party (PJ) and president of the PJ in Tucumán, influencing bloc strategy on fiscal and welfare issues.

Policy positions and achievements

Public health initiatives

During his tenure as National Minister of Health from December 2009 to October 2015, Manzur oversaw the implementation of comprehensive measures, including the passage of Law 26.687 in 2011, which banned in all enclosed public spaces, prohibited tobacco and promotion, and mandated larger health warnings on packaging. He publicly endorsed the legislation, describing it as a milestone for controlling tobacco use in . These policies aligned with recommendations and were supported by the 2012 Global Adult Tobacco Survey conducted under his ministry, which tracked prevalence and exposure to among adults. Manzur also advanced maternal and child health coverage through the expansion of Plan Nacer into Programa Sumar in 2012, incorporating chronic disease management for adults aged 20-64 and extending benefits to additional age groups beyond pregnant women and children under six. This results-based financing model, developed in collaboration with the World Bank, aimed to improve access for uninsured populations and reduce maternal and by funding preventive services and hospitalizations. Under his leadership, the program equipped health facilities and supported provincial implementation, with evaluations noting increased utilization of services among low-income groups. As of Tucumán from to , Manzur supported initiatives to enhance rural healthcare access, including endorsement of the PASE Sanitario Rural (PASAR) in 2020, a program providing health passes and services for rural workers in coordination with agricultural unions. Provincial data from his administrations correlated with a halving of rates between 2001 and 2018, attributed in part to sustained investments in infrastructure and vaccination drives, though broader national trends contributed.

Economic and provincial development efforts

During his tenure as governor of Tucumán from 2015 to 2021, Juan Luis Manzur prioritized infrastructure improvements to enhance provincial connectivity and , including the of 325 kilometers of new roads and the development of productive, tourist, and tertiary road networks to facilitate agricultural and industrial . Key projects encompassed the reactivation of the Belgrano Cargas railway over 1,215.8 kilometers from Villa Rosa to Tucumán and 335.5 kilometers from Tucumán to Jujuy, alongside initiatives such as the Provincial Energy Transport Plan, which involved nine transmission links, eight transformer stations, and five expansions at 132 kV to support industrial expansion. In September 2021, Manzur oversaw the advancement of a new bridge on Ruta Nacional 323 between Santa Rosa de Leales and Aguilares to improve production connectivity, emphasizing for agroindustrial exports. Manzur's administration focused on agroindustrial development, leveraging Tucumán's strengths in and through expansions targeting 45,000 hectares for and 4,000 hectares for , supported by 110,000 meters of pipelines and hydraulic works like and canals. Policies promoted green cane harvesting, achieving 80-90% adoption locally compared to 22% globally, alongside goals for zero emissions from sugar mills and 60% anaerobic treatment of for production to modernize the sector environmentally. An industrial reconversion plan incentivized compliance in agroindustrial and metal-mechanic sectors, with visits to facilities like the Alpargatas shoe in Aguilares highlighting efforts to sustain employment. In August 2020, Manzur launched the Plan Integral de Desarrollo Productivo Tucumán Emerge to motorize sustainable production across municipalities, integrating and private sectors for job creation and diversification amid national economic constraints. The Strategic Guidelines for Tucumán's Development (2016-2020) set broader targets, including reducing from baseline levels to 6.5% by 2020, formalizing to cut unregistered work to 30%, and boosting through a 50% increase in business technology investments. These efforts aimed to achieve 2.3% annual GDP growth, with sector-specific goals of 2% for and 3% for industry, though implementation occurred against a backdrop of macroeconomic volatility including and currency controls under successive national administrations.

Controversies and criticisms

Public health management and COVID-19 oversight

Manzur's tenure as National Minister of Health from December 2011 to December 2015 involved oversight of campaigns and responses to infectious outbreaks, including dengue epidemics in northern provinces. Critics highlighted delays in vaccine procurement and distribution during the 2009 H1N1 swine flu pandemic's aftermath, where Manzur, appointed amid the crisis, rejected declaring a national health emergency despite estimates of up to 100,000 infections, contributing to perceptions of inadequate preparedness. As of Tucumán from 2015 to 2021, Manzur's administration managed provincial systems amid persistent challenges, including questioned statistics that reportedly declined but faced allegations of data manipulation to align with national targets under Peronist governance. Reports noted inconsistencies in reporting, with Tucumán's rates lagging behind national averages despite claimed improvements, raising concerns over transparency in health metrics. During the , Tucumán under Manzur recorded over 100,000 cases and 2,000 deaths by mid-2021, with a sharp surge in September 2020 prompting a sanitary alert as hospitals neared capacity. Provincial authorities were accused of minimizing community transmission to sustain economic reopening phases, delaying stricter quarantines despite rising infections, which critics linked to underreporting and strained critical care resources. A Tucumán doctor who publicly denounced irregularities—such as patients occupying ICU beds needed for severe cases and shortages in protective equipment—contracted the virus and died in September 2020, amplifying scrutiny over operational mismanagement and worker safety protocols. Manzur faced additional criticism for attending a restricted social gathering in June 2021, a event in Simoca amid active quarantines, which violated provincial guidelines and drew rebukes from his vice-governor for undermining public compliance efforts. As Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers from September 2021 onward, Manzur coordinated national pandemic oversight with Health Minister Carla Vizzotti, emphasizing vaccine distribution—Argentina secured over 100 million doses by early 2022—but amid broader debates over the prolonged lockdowns' economic toll and rates exceeding 130,000 nationally, with Tucumán contributing disproportionately per capita in later waves.

Allegations of corruption and clientelism

During his tenure as of Tucumán from 2015 to 2021, Juan Luis Manzur's administration faced persistent allegations of , characterized by the strategic allocation of public funds and social benefits to foster political loyalty and influence electoral outcomes. Critics, including opposition leaders, accused the provincial government of maintaining a system through control over the "caja" (public treasury), which enabled the distribution of prebendas (favors) and resources to supporters, rendering the Peronist machine nearly unbeatable in local elections. For instance, in the lead-up to the 2023 provincial elections, rivals claimed that Manzur's faction, in alliance with Osvaldo Jaldo, engaged in widespread clientelistic practices, including the promise of jobs and aid tied to votes, exacerbating Tucumán's entrenched political favoritism. Tucumán under Manzur's Peronist governance exhibited systemic challenges with corruption impunity, as documented in analyses of provincial cases from 2005 to 2018, during which 219 corruption denuncias were filed but only one resulted in a firm conviction, primarily against lower-level officials rather than high-ranking executives. This pattern persisted into Manzur's governorship, with allegations of judicial influence limiting accountability for executive actions, including public works contracts and resource allocation prone to irregularities. A notable example involved a 2020 provincial decree, proposed during Manzur's tenure, granting a five-year tax exemption on gross income to Suizo Argentina S.A., a pharmaceutical distributor later implicated in a national scandal over alleged coimas (bribes) for disability benefit contracts via ANDIS; opposition figures, such as Ricardo Bussi, demanded revocation of these benefits, citing potential conflicts of interest tied to Manzur's networks. Manzur personally encountered corruption probes, including multiple investigations for illicit enrichment stemming from his declared assets growing from approximately 370,000 pesos in 2003 to over 4.6 million pesos by 2009 upon entering national office, prompting judicial reviews of property acquisitions and business ties in Tucumán and San Juan. Federal judges ordered asset verifications and dismissed cases in 2014, 2016, and 2020, citing insufficient evidence of illicit origins despite public scrutiny from figures like Elisa Carrió, who in 2022 renewed denuncias over his wealth accumulation. As Health Minister (2011–2015), he was indicted in 2018 by Judge Claudio Bonadío in the Plan Qunita scandal for alleged fraud and abuse of authority in overpriced contracts for maternal kits totaling millions of pesos, but subsequent rulings in 2021 confirmed his sobreseimiento due to lack of direct involvement. These cases, while unresolved in conviction, underscored recurring claims of opacity in Peronist-led resource management, with no formal charges upheld against Manzur to date.

Economic policy failures and Peronist governance impacts

During Juan Luis Manzur's tenure as Chief of the Cabinet of Ministers from September 2021 to February 2023, Argentina's economy under the Peronist administration of President grappled with accelerating inflation, driven by fiscal deficits financed through monetary expansion and persistent subsidies that distorted resource allocation. Annual inflation reached 50.9% in 2021, escalating to 94.8% in as the government printed money to cover a primary fiscal deficit averaging 3-4% of GDP, undermining the 2022 IMF agreement's targets for deficit reduction to 0.9% by 2024. These policies, rooted in Peronist emphasis on state intervention and income redistribution without corresponding productivity gains, exacerbated , which hovered around 40% nationally—impacting over 18 million people— as stagnated amid devaluation and restrictions that fueled shortages. Peronist governance, exemplified by Manzur's roles in both provincial and national capacities, perpetuated a cycle of short-term populist measures—such as expansive public employment and welfare transfers—that prioritized political loyalty over fiscal discipline, contributing to Argentina's ninth sovereign debt default historically and chronic macroeconomic instability. In under Manzur's governorship (2015–2021), reliance on clientelist networks for social assistance sustained high levels, with urban indigence rates exceeding national averages due to limited in export diversification beyond and lemons, amid national recessions that contracted provincial output. This approach mirrored broader Peronist failures, where interventionist controls on prices and wages historically led to episodes, as seen in the , by suppressing market signals and encouraging . Empirical data from the period show Tucumán's economy vulnerable to national policies, with no significant structural reforms to break dependency on volatile commodities, resulting in persistent underperformance relative to more market-oriented provinces. Critics attribute these outcomes to Peronism's causal neglect of institutional incentives for savings and , favoring redistribution that erodes competitiveness; for instance, during Manzur's , the failure to adhere to IMF-mandated reforms prolonged vulnerabilities, with reserves dropping below import cover levels and gross debt exceeding 100% of GDP. While official narratives emphasized external shocks like the , domestic policy choices—high real spending and rigidity—amplified vulnerabilities, as evidenced by the central bank's net liabilities tripling. In Tucumán, allegations of fiscal opacity and overstaffed public sectors under Manzur compounded inefficiencies, with provincial debt rising amid national bailouts, illustrating Peronist governance's tendency toward and intergenerational burdens.

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