Ulises Humala

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}

{{BLP sources|date=July 2011}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| name = Ulises Humala

| image = humalaUlises.jpg

| caption =

| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1959|03|02|df=yes}}

| death_date =

| birth_name = Ulises Humala Tasso

| birth_place = Lima, Peru

| death_place =

| party = Go on Country

}}Ulises Humala Tasso (born 2 March 1959{{cite news |first=Ricardo |last=Monzón |title=Nadine Heredia tiene la información sobre aportes recibidos |url= https://peru21.pe/opinion/nadine-heredia-informacion-aportes-recibidos-165221-noticia/ |publisher=Perú.21 |access-date=19 April 2025 |language=es |date=26 August 2019 |trans-title=Nadine Heredia has information about the contributions received}} in Lima) is a Peruvian professor at the Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería and a politician who ran unsuccessfully for president in the 2006 election on the Avanza País ticket.Millett, Richard (2009) Latin American Democracy: Emerging Reality or Endangered Species, Routledge, {{ISBN|978-0-415-99047-9}}, p. 154 He was running against his brother, Ollanta Humala, and 18 other candidates."[http://www.terra.com.pe/noticias/nacional/31/31798.html Padre de Humala apoya amnistía para Abimael Guzmán y Víctor Polay]", terra.com.pe, 17 March 2006, retrieved 9 July 2011 Ulises received 0.2% of the vote, coming in 14th place.

Like his brother Ollanta, Ulises Humala considers himself to be a nationalist. However, he claims to be less radical. He also considers the current 1993 constitution, produced in the "Democratic Constitutional Congress" after Alberto Fujimori's self-coup and during the Peruvian Constitutional Crisis of 1992, to be illegal.

One of his other brothers, Antauro Humala, went to prison for leading a failed military rebellion.Boesten, Jelke (2010) Intersecting Inequalities: Women and Social Policy in Peru, 1990–2000, The Pennsylvania State University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-271-03671-7}}, p. 141 and currently is one of the main candidates for the upcoming presidential elections. The other brother, Ollanta Humala, served as the 65th President of Peru.

References