1938 Bolivian National Convention#Aftermath
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}
{{Infobox legislature
| name = 1938 National Convention of Bolivia
| native_name = Convención Nacional de Bolivia de 1938
| coa_pic = Coat_of_arms_of_Bolivia.svg
| coa_res =
| house_type = Unicameral
| body =
| preceded_by = 1931–36 Congress
| succeeded_by = 1940–42 Congress
| houses = {{nowrap|Chamber of Senators,
Chamber of Deputies}}
| leader1_type = President of the National Convention
| leader1 = Renato Riverín
| party1 = FPP
| election1 = 23 May 1938
| members = 103
18 Senators
103 Deputies
| house1 = Chamber of Senators
| house2 = Chamber of Deputies
| structure1 = File:Senado de Bolivia elecciones 1938.svg
| structure1_res = 250px
| political_groups1 =
{{nowrap|{{color box|{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}|border=silver}} FUS (18)}}
- {{color box|{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PL (8)
- {{color box|{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PRS (4)
- {{color box|darksalmon|border=silver}} FPP (2)
- {{color box|{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}|border=silver}} ??? (4)
| structure2 = File:Cámara de Diputados de Bolivia elecciones 1938.svg
| structure2_res = 250px
| political_groups2 =
{{nowrap|{{color box|{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}|border=silver}} FUS (96)}}
- {{color box|{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PSU (19)
- {{color box|{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}|border=silver}} PSI (7)
- {{color box|{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PRS (6)
- {{color box|{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PL (3)
- {{color box|darksalmon|border=silver}} FPP (2)
- {{color box|{{party color|Workers' Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} PO (1)
- {{color box|{{party color|Revolutionary Workers' Party (Bolivia)}}|border=silver}} POR (1)
- {{color box|#92B558|border=silver}} LEC (1)
- {{color box|{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}|border=silver}} ??? (58)
{{color box|{{party color|Independent politician}}|border=silver}} Ind. (7)
{{color box|white|border=silver}} Ind. clerics (2)
| voting_system1 = Party-list proportional representation
| voting_system2 = Additional Member System
| last_election1 = 13 March 1938
| next_election1 = 10 March 1940
| last_election2 = 13 March 1938
| next_election2 = 10 March 1940
| session_room = Palacio Legislativo Boliviano.jpg
| session_res =
| meeting_place = Legislative Palace
}}
The 1938 Bolivian National Convention was a meeting of the unicameral Bolivian legislature composed of an elected constituent assembly made up of the Chamber of Senators and Chamber of Deputies.{{Cite journal|last=Klein|first=Herbert S.|date=1966-01-01|title="Social Constitutionalism" in Latin America: The Bolivian Experience of 1938|journal=The Americas|volume=22|issue=3|pages=258–276|doi=10.2307/979170|jstor=979170 |s2cid=147268955 |issn=0003-1615}} It met in La Paz from 25 May to 30 October 1938 and was charged with rewriting the Constitution of Bolivia.Rossana Barragán, "Ciudadanía y elecciones, convenciones y debates" in {{Cite book|last=Barragán R.|first=Rossana|title=Regiones y poder constituyente en Bolivia : una historia de pactos y disputas|author2=José Luis Roca|publisher=PNUD|year=2005|isbn=978-99905-0-960-1|series=Cuaderno de futuro, 21|location=La Paz, Bolivia|page=336}} President David Toro had called for the National Convention in 1937, but by the time it was held he had been forced to resign in a coup d'état which brought the young lieutenant colonel Germán Busch to power on 13 July 1937.
The Congress was elected as part of that year's legislative election. Voter rolls for electing convention members were opened in August 1937 and the vote was held on 13 March 1938.Rossana Barragán, "Ciudadanía y elecciones, convenciones y debates" in {{Cite book|last=Barragán R.|first=Rossana|title=Regiones y poder constituyente en Bolivia : una historia de pactos y disputas|author2=José Luis Roca|publisher=PNUD|year=2005|isbn=978-99905-0-960-1|series=Cuaderno de futuro, 21|location=La Paz, Bolivia|page=361}}
Background
President David Toro, who called the National Convention, had presided over a clearly left-wing ideology known as Military Socialism. His successor Germán Busch, however, was politically enigmatic with both the left and the right alike assuming he would reverse course from the leftist Toro back to the traditional conservatism of the pre-Chaco War establishment.{{harvnb|Klein|1967|pp=168–171}}
The coming assembly was the first national legislative body to meet in Bolivia in over three years.{{Cite book|last=Gotkowitz|first=Laura|title=A revolution for our rights: Indigenous struggles for land and justice in Bolivia, 1880–1952|publisher=Duke University Press|year=2007|location=Durham|page=115}} With it, the traditional establishment parties (The Liberals and the Genuine and Socialist Republicans) hoped to reassert themselves in national politics. However, the Busch regime soon took a left-wing political stance, implementing the Toro-era concept of union representation in government by allowing the Trade Union Confederation of Bolivian Workers (CSTB) and the Legion of Veterans (LEC) to present candidates in the legislative elections.
Soon, the CSTB and LEC joined with multiple left-wing parties, from the moderate socialist United Socialist Party (PSU) to the more radical Independent Socialist Party (PSI), and formed the Socialist Single Front (FUS), a united electoral alliance backed by the Busch government. Faced with a unified left-wing coalition, the traditional parties withdrew from the elections, save for the Socialist Republicans who joined with the FUS and certain dissident Liberals who chose to collaborate with the new regime.
With the path to victory cleared, the FUS won the 1938 legislative election in a landslide, winning all 18 seats in the Chamber of Senators and 96 of the 103 seats in the Chamber of Deputies with just 7 seats going to independents and 2 being won by independent clerics from La Paz.Political handbook of the world 1940. New York, 1940. P. 12. Thus, when the convention finally opened in May 1938, the so-called Generación del Chaco (Chaco Generation) finally and for the first time found itself with a national platform from which to constitute its ideas into law.
The Convention
The National Convention opened on 25 May 1938, electing Renato Riverín of the Popular Front of Potosí (FPP) as its president. It was the first time workers were included in a Bolivian constituent assembly.Rossana Barragán, "Ciudadanía y elecciones, convenciones y debates" in {{Cite book|last=Barragán R.|first=Rossana|title=Regiones y poder constituyente en Bolivia : una historia de pactos y disputas|author2=José Luis Roca|publisher=PNUD|year=2005|isbn=978-99905-0-960-1|series=Cuaderno de futuro, 21|location=La Paz, Bolivia|page=279}} The convention dominated the political scene nationwide, becoming the debate grounds of ideologues and thinkers of the entire left-wing spectrum, from moderate socialists to economic nationalists and hard line Marxist labor leaders.{{harvnb|Klein|1967|pp=171–172}}
= Presidential election =
One of the first acts of the new assembly was to formally elect Germán Busch constitutional president on 27 May. Enrique Baldivieso, a deputy for Potosí and the leader of the United Socialist Party, was elected vice president. The pair were formally inaugurated as part of a national holiday the following day with terms set to last until 6 August 1942.{{Cite web|title=Bolivia: Ley de 27 de mayo de 1938|url=https://www.lexivox.org/norms/BO-L-19380527-2.xhtml|access-date=2021-02-26|website=www.lexivox.org}}
= 1938 Constitution =
With its dominant position in the assembly, the left-wing quickly overpowered more conservative elements, rejecting liberal concepts of limited government and laissez-faire which had shaped the entire constitutional history of Bolivia. The classical Constitution of 1880 would be thrown out and the new one written under the guidelines of a revolutionary concept known as "social constitutionalism" in which the State was given the expanded role of providing for the economic and social needs of the population. At the same time, the concept of private property was reworded, limiting it from a natural right to a government-given right which was granted only so long as it fulfilled a "social function".{{harvnb|Querejazu Calvo|1977|p=163}}
The new constitution also provided for many benefits and securities for organized labor which would now enjoy the direct protection of the State. Annual paid leave, a minimum wage, insurance for accidents and disability, and guarantees for unions were all included. The legal existence of indigenous communities was also recognized.{{Cite web|title=Constitución social de Bolivia de 1938|url=https://jorgemachicado.blogspot.com/2010/05/cpe1938.html|access-date=2021-02-26|website=APUNTES JURIDICOS}}
The so-called "Labor Sector" which represented the most extreme left of the convention also called for full-scale land reform. The leader of the Independent Socialists, the Tarijeño deputy Víctor Paz Estenssoro, also called for complete government control of the country's expansive tin industry, which up until then had been dominated by the tin barons of the mining oligarchy. While these more radical reforms were shot down, they received a voice on the national stage for the very first time.
Finally, after months of deliberation and debate, the Political Constitution of 1938 was promulgated on 30 October.
Aftermath
For all its successes and contributions, one notable absence from the Convention was President Germán Busch himself. Politically naïve, Busch contributed little to the writing of the new Constitution. The Socialist Single Front, which created a united front of the left-wing parties, only lasted through the legislative elections. From there, the different factions of the left remained in a state of instability, forming and breaking apart from one another in their attempts to create a viable political coalition. Despite attempts by Renato Riverín and Busch's advisor Gabriel Gosálvez to form a government-backed Socialist Party, it suffered from a lack of commitment on the part of Busch and collapsed entirely when Vicente Leyton, his own Minister of Government, refused to join it.{{harvnb|Klein|1967|p=176}}
Further fracturing occurred on 19 January 1939 when nine deputies and three senators announced the formation of the Eastern Socialist Party (PSO), also known as the Orientalist Party. The new party was aligned with the traditional liberalism of the pre-Chaco War parties and its political program expressed its intent to "proclaim the intangibility of the Eastern territory" and "to accept as a basic principle the integrity of each of the eastern departments, leaving established their historical and racial identity." For these reasons it was described by its critics as both "regionalist" and "racist" and was condemned by various social and cultural institutions, regional centers, trade union organizations, veterans, journalists, and even the Liberal Party.{{Cite web|title=Busch y la efímera existencia del partido orientalista en Bolivia|url=https://www.paginasiete.bo/gente/2019/7/27/busch-la-efimera-existencia-del-partido-orientalista-en-bolivia-225490.html|access-date=2021-04-28|website=www.paginasiete.bo|language=spanish}}
Nevertheless, the PSO on 1 February appealed for President Busch to join. However, on 14 February Busch warned that the "founding [of] a regionalist party [...] constitutes an attack against national unity." Busch's harsh condemnation came amidst calls that the members of the PSO be expelled from the legislature. Given the weight of the pressure and "In compliance with the order of His Excellency Mr. President," the PSO was dissolved on 18 February, less than a month after its formation.
The PSO was the last attempt made by the more traditionally-oriented parties to ally themselves with the Busch government. Just a month later on 22 March, the Liberals and both Republican parties broke with their previous policy of interacting with the fringes of the moderate left and formed the Concordance coalition in direct opposition to the government.Fredrick B. Pike. The United States and the Andean republics: Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador. Harvard University Press, 1977. p. 255. The Concordance came forth demanding the end of military involvement in government and announced their intent to present candidates for the May legislative elections.{{harvnb|Klein|1967|p=175}}
As a result, the left-wing stood without a united front against the resurgent and combined traditional parties, resulting in a bleak outlook on the coming legislative elections. Finally, tired of political manoeuvring and disappointed with the lack of results his regime had produced, Busch took matters into his own hands. On 24 April 1939, Busch declared totalitarian rule in a self-coup to the shock of the nation. The May legislative elections were cancelled and the assembly was permanently adjourned, bringing an end to the only legislature of the military socialist era.{{Cite news|last=TIMES|first=Special Cable to THE NEW YORK|date=25 April 1939|title=TOTALITARIAN RULE DECREED IN BOLIVIA BY PRESIDENT, 35; Busch Assumes Dictatorial Powers, Doing Away With Congress and Basic Law (Published 1939)|language=en-US|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1939/04/25/archives/totalitarian-rule-decreed-in-bolivia-by-president-35-busch-assumes.html|access-date=24 October 2020|issn=0362-4331}}
Leadership
= National Convention =
- President: Renato Riverín (FPP), from 25 May 1938
- First Vice President: Alfredo Mollinedo (PSU)
- Secretary: Agustín Landívar Zambrana
- Secretary: Augusto Guzmán (PSU)
- Secretary: Roberto Jordán Cuéllar (PSU)
- Secretary: Jesús Lijerón Rodríguez (Ind.)
Composition
{{multiple image
| align =
| direction =
| width =
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = Vice President
| image1 = Enrique Baldivieso - 2.jpg
| width1 = 165
| alt1 = Enrique Baldivieso
| caption1 = Enrique Baldivieso (PSU)
}}
{{multiple image
| align =
| direction =
| width =
| caption_align = center
| header_align = center
| header = National Convention President
| image1 = Renato Riverín.jpg
| width1 = 165
| alt1 = Renato Riverín
| caption1 = Renato Riverín (FPP)
}}
= Chamber of Senators =
1938 members of the Chamber of Senators:Valentín Abecia López. Montenegro: homenaje del Honorable Senado Nacional, a los 44 años de su muerte. Honorable Senado Nacional, 1997. Pp. 138.{{Cite web|title=Bolivia: Constitución política de 1938, 30 de octubre de 1938|url=https://www.lexivox.org/norms/BO-CPE-19381020.xhtml|access-date=2021-02-26|website=www.lexivox.org}}
class="wikitable sortable"
! Senator ! Department ! colspan="2" |Party |
Gregorio Mendizábal
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Sebastián García Agreda
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Eduardo Rodríguez Vásquez
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
José P. Bilbao Llano
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
José Antezana
| style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
Otoniel Quiroga
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Luis Herrero
| Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Ricardo Rivera
| Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Carlos Medinaceli
| Potosí | style="background:darksalmon" | | FPP |
Renato Riverín
| Potosí | style="background:darksalmon" | | FPP |
Bernardo Navajas Trigo
| Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
Julio Pantoja Estenssoro
| Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
rowspan="2" | Germán Chávez
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1|From 19 January – 18 February 1939}} |
Julio Salmón
| style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
rowspan="2" | Napoleón Solares Arias
| rowspan="2" | Beni | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
rowspan="2" | Sócrates Parada Suárez
| rowspan="2" | Beni | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Gregorio Balcázar
| Pando | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Pablo Saucedo Barbery
| Pando | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
= Chamber of Deputies =
1938 members of the Chamber of Deputies:Valentín Abecia López. Montenegro: homenaje del Honorable Senado Nacional, a los 44 años de su muerte. Honorable Senado Nacional, 1997. Pp. 139-143.
class="wikitable sortable"
! Deputy ! Department ! Constituency ! colspan="2" |Party |
Adrián Camacho Porcel
| Oropeza | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Alberto Berdeja
| Sucre | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Alberto Echazú
| Sucre | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Alberto Zelada
| Sucre | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Desiderio M. Rivera
| style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Enrique Reyes Barrón
| Tomina | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Esteban Durán
| Sucre | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Germán Pareja
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Jorge Arana Urioste
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
José Romero Loza
| Azurduy | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Óscar Emilio Arauz
| Zudáñez | style="background:#92B558" | | LEC |
Ricardo Gambarte
| El Azero | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Adolfo Paco Careaga
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Adrián Oblitas
| La Paz | Muñecas | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Alfredo Mollinedo
| La Paz | La Paz | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Carlos Gómez Cornejo
| La Paz | Loayza | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Carlos Machicao
| La Paz | Ingavi | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Federico Román
| La Paz | style="background:#92B558" | | LEC |
Félix Eguino Zaballa
| La Paz | Omasuyos | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Félix Vargas Soto
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Humberto del Solar
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Jorge Ballón Saravia
| La Paz | Murillo | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
José Bascón
| La Paz | Larecaja | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Luis Alberto Tapia
| La Paz | La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Luis Barbery
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Nazario Pardo Valle
| La Paz | Caupolicán | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Rigoberto Villarroel Claure
| La Paz | Pacajes | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Rufino Saldaña
| La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Tomás Chávez Lobatón
| La Paz | La Paz | style="background:white" | | Ind. |
Waldo Álvarez
| La Paz | La Paz | style="background:{{party color|Workers' Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PO |
Wálter Portillo
| La Paz | Camacho | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Ángel Jordán
| Cliza | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Augusto Céspedes
| style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Augusto Guzmán
| style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
David Ardaya
| Punata | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Felipe Ayala Gamboa
| style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Humberto Montaño
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Jorge Mercado Rosales
| style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
José Anaya
| Tarata | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
José Antonio Camacho
| Campero | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Workers' Party (Bolivia)}}" | | POR |
José Antonio Zegada
| Mizque | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
José Enrique Peña
| Chapare | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Julio Espinoza
| Ayopaya | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Lucio Vargas Díaz
| Arque | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Luis Felipe Guzmán
| Capinota | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
Rodolfo Costas
| Carrasco | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Rodolfo Soriano
| Tapacarí | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Wálter Guevara
| Aran | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Abel Leyes
| Oruro | Abaroa | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Ángel Mendizábal
| Oruro | Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
Armando Renjel
| Oruro | Poopó | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Eduardo Fajardo
| Oruro | Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Enrique Liendo
| Oruro | Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Julián Montellano
| Oruro | Carangas | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Telesforo Morales
| Oruro | Oruro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Trifonio Delgado
| Oruro | Huanuni | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Alfredo Arratia
| Potosí | Potosí | style="background:darksalmon" | | FPP |
Carlos Cortez
| Potosí | Quijarro | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Carlos Gregorio Taborga
| Potosí | Chayanta | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Corsino Rodríguez Quiroga
| Potosí | Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Emilio Sejas
| Potosí | Bustillo | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Enrique Baldivieso
| Potosí | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Eustaquio Bilbao Rioja
| Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Fernando Siñani
| Potosí | style="background:darksalmon" | | FPP |
Gastón Pacheco
| Potosí | Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Guillermo Rivero
| Potosí | Potosí | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
José María Cortez
| Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Julio Velasco G.
| Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Lucio Lanza Solares
| Potosí | Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Luis Ossio Ruiz
| Potosí | Linares | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Severo Clavijo Suárez
| Potosí | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Abel Márquez
| Tarija | Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Antonio Campero Arce
| Tarija | Méndez | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Antonio Mogro Moreno
| Tarija | Avilés | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Gustavo Auzza
| Tarija | Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Republican Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PRS |
Hugo Pizarro Aráoz
| Tarija | O'Connor | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Jorge Aráoz Campero
| Tarija | Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Víctor Paz Estenssoro
| Tarija | Tarija | style="background:{{party color|Revolutionary Nationalist Movement}}" | | PSI |
Adolfo Román
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Agustín Landívar Zambrana
| Warnes | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Aquino Ibáñez Coruco
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Facundo Flores Jiménez
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Velasco | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Fernando Justiniano
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Francisco Hurtado
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Cordillera | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
rowspan="2" | José Daniel Antelo
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Sara | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
José Serrate
| Ichilo | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Mario Ortiz Suárez
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Roberto Prado
| style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Sixto Montero Hoyos
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Florida | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
rowspan="2" | Wálter Suárez Landívar
| rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | rowspan="2" | Santa Cruz | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Adolfo Aponte
| Beni | Yacuma | style="background:{{party color|Independent politician}}" | | Ind. |
Antonio Munguía
| Beni | Trinidad | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
Augusto Chávez C.
| Beni | Trinidad | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Gonzalo Cuéllar Jiménez
| Beni | Iténez | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Gonzalo Suárez Dorado
| rowspan="2" | Beni | rowspan="2" | Trinidad | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Jesús Lijerón Rodríguez
| Beni | Trinidad | style="background:{{party color|Independent politician}}" | | Ind. |
rowspan="2" | Jesús Rioja Aponte
| rowspan="2" | Beni | rowspan="2" | Marbán | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
Juan Manuel Suárez
| Beni | style="background:{{party color|Independent politician}}" | | Ind. |
Nataniel García Chávez
| Beni | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
Adolfo Leigue
| Pando | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
rowspan="2" | Ismael Zuazo
| rowspan="2" | Pando | rowspan="2" | Porvenir | style="background:{{party color|Socialist Single Front}}" | | ??? |
style="background:#5D9678" |
| PSO{{efn|name=fn1}} |
José Chávez Suárez
| Pando | Cobija | style="background:{{party color|Liberal Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PL |
Roberto Jordán Cuéllar
| Pando | Cobija | style="background:{{party color|United Socialist Party (Bolivia)}}" | | PSU |
References
= Notes =
{{Noteslist}}
= Footnotes =
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
- {{Cite journal|last=Klein|first=Herbert S.|title=Germán Busch and the Era of "Military Socialism" in Bolivia|url=https://www.academia.edu/3087282|journal=The Hispanic American Historical Review |volume=XLVII |issue=2 |date=May 1967|pages= 166–184|language=en}}
- {{Cite book|last=Querejazu Calvo|first=Roberto|title=Llallagua: historia de una montaña|url=http://www.librosmaravillosos.com/llallagua/pdf/Llallagua%20Historia%20de%20una%20Montana%20-%20Roberto%20Querejazu%20Calvo.pdf|year=1977}}
Category:Political history of Bolivia
Category:Defunct unicameral legislatures
Category:Constitutional conventions (political meeting)
Category:Constitution of Bolivia
Category:20th century in La Paz