Английская Википедия:Aldo Dávila
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:BLP sources Шаблон:Family name hatnote Шаблон:Infobox officeholder Aldo Iván Dávila Morales (born 20 September 1977)[1] is a Guatemalan politician who served as deputy of the Congress of Guatemala from 2020 to 2024. Dávila won the 2019 general election as a member of the political party Winaq. He is the first openly gay man and first HIV-positive member elected to Congress.[2][3][4]
Early years
Dávila was born in Guatemala City, capital of the Central American country, into a Catholic family. His primary studies were carried out in an evangelical school near the family home in the Saravia neighborhood (zone 5).[5] Being the oldest of 3 brothers, he lost his father at the age of 14, which led him to be the main male breadwinner in his home. During his adolescence he suffered bullying from his peers and teaching staff due to his sexual orientation.[6]
Political career
Since 2010 he was president of the LGBT Gente Positiva association. In 2019 he led the candidacy for the Central District to the Congress of Guatemala in the elections of that year as a member of Winaq.[7] He assumed his parliamentary position on January 14, 2020,[8] becoming the only openly LGBT member of the legislature, as Sandra Morán, Guatemala's first LGBT representative, did not run for re-election.
In March 2020, Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei described Dávila as "gross" after a controversy over the numbers of deaths from COVID-19 during the coronavirus pandemic and the possible variation of numbers due to confusion over deaths from atypical pneumonia .[9]
In June 2023, the presidential candidate Manuel Villacorta presented him as his possible Minister of Labor and Social Security if he won the 2023 general elections.[7]
Dávila applied for re-election to Congress for the 2023 election, but was denied by the Constitutional Court due to two removals of parliamentary immunity during his term. He was retained as an advisor to the VOS bloc in Congress for the 2024-2028 term.[10][11]
References
- Английская Википедия
- Members of the Congress of Guatemala
- Gay politicians
- Guatemalan LGBT politicians
- Living people
- Guatemalan gay men
- Guatemalan LGBT rights activists
- Guatemalan activists
- LGBT legislators
- People with HIV/AIDS
- 1977 births
- 20th-century Guatemalan LGBT people
- 21st-century Guatemalan LGBT people
- Activists with disabilities
- Guatemalan people with disabilities
- Politicians with disabilities
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