Ronald Solís Bolaños is a Costa Rican businessman and politician. He served as a deputy in the Legislative Assembly.
Ronald Solís Bolaños | |
---|---|
Deputy Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica | |
In office 2006–2010 | |
Constituency | San José, Costa Rica |
Personal details | |
Political party | Citizens' Action Party |
Profession | Businessman, politician |
Biographic information
editSolís Bolaños runs an agricultural business.[1] He was Vice President of the Chamber of Commerce For Costa Rica (Cámara Empresarios Pro Costa Rica).[2]
Solís Bolaños supported creating a national referendum for the Central American Free Trade Agreement. He opposed its ratification.[2]
Deputy
editAs a member of the Citizens' Action Party (PAC for its Spanish initials), Solís Bolaños became a deputy for the 2006 to 2010 legislative session. He remained a critic of CAFTA, claiming that profits stay within companies that open branches in Costa Rica, rather than remaining with the citizens of the country or the workers.[3] He cited the case of Walmart as an example, saying their prices were artificial and led to lower prices for domestic products, such as beef.[3]
Run for president
editSolís Bolaños began his campaign to be PAC's presidential candidate in February 2013.[4] Although he remained a member of the party, he expressed displeasure with the PAC's internal elections process. He disagreed that a group of 80 assemblymen and women elected the presidential candidate, saying that the internal voting should be open to all PAC party members.[1] Solís Bolaños also supported creating a voting block alliance with other parties, which many members of PAC disagreed with.[1]
As he opened his campaign, Solís Bolaños expressed his displeasure with the Chinchilla administration and his approval of PAC's primary's democratic system.[4] He ran against Epsy Campbell Barr, Juan Carlos Mendoza, and Luis Guillermo Solís. Solís Bolaños received only 4% of the PAC's votes and conceded to Luis Guillermo Solís who went on to win the election. He remains a member of PAC.
References
edit- ^ a b c Francia, Fernando (3 October 2013). "Ronald Solís: Que 80 delegados definan candidato sería peligroso". El Pais (in Spanish). San Jose. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
- ^ a b Solís Bolaños, Ronald. "Sin TLC o con TLC: ¿País soberano o colonia?" (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2014.
- ^ a b Jiménez, Ivonne (24 February 2000). "Costa Rica, ¿y el Plan Escudo?: indefensión de productores y consumidores". Fundación para la Integración latinoamericana (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 24 April 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
- ^ a b Delgado, Gustavo (24 June 2013). "DECISIÓN 2014: Ronald Solís Bolaños". Cámara Nacional de Radio de Costa Rica (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 April 2014.