Romero was inaugurated as President of El Salvador on 1 July 1977 alongside Vice President Astacio. Romero's term was scheduled to last for five years until 1982. Romero appointed a cabinet of 14 ministers. His cabinet ministers were
Roberto Chico Duarte as Minister of Planning;
Roberto Ortiz Ávalos as Minister of the Economy;
René Fuentes Castellanos as Minister of Integration;
Agrónomo Rutilio Aguilera as
Minister of Agriculture and Livestock;
Rafael Flores y Flores as Minister of Justice;
Carlos Herrera Rebollo as
Minister of Education;
César Augusto Escalante as
Minister of Public Health and Social Assistance;
León Rivas Durán as Minister of Public Works; Colonel
Roberto Escobar García as
Minister of Labor and Social Forecast;
Álvaro Ernesto Martínez as
Minister of Foreign Relations;
René López Bertrand as
Minister of Finance; General
Armando Leónidas Rojas as
Minister of the Interior; General
Federico Castillo Yanes as Minister of Defense and Public Security; and Astacio as Minister of the Presidency.
Political violence Romero became President of El Salvador at a time when various leftist militant groups and
right-wing death squads engaged in political violence. Attacks such as assassinations, kidnappings, and bombings increased during Romero's presidency. Only 12 days after Romero assumed office, former president Colonel
Osmín Aguirre y Salinas was assassinated by the
Farabundo Martí Popular Liberation Forces (FPL). Some of Romero's military officers were actively involved in death squad activity and commanded groups such as the White Warriors Union. on 8 September 1977 in
Washington, D.C. The government of U.S. president
Jimmy Carter was concerned about the human rights situation of El Salvador due to attacks by death squads on Catholic clergy in the country. In August 1977, Romero met with
Patricia Derian (the
U.S. assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights, and labor) and told her that "human rights are respected" in El Salvador. Romero met Carter in
Washington, D.C. and Carter remarked that El Salvador's human rights situation had experienced "great progress" since Romero assumed office. In November 1977, Romero enacted a law that legalized repression against opposition groups. Romero's time in office was largely characterized by escalating violence and instability. In the late 1970s, political unrest increased, because of El Salvador's severe socio-economic inequalities unaddressed by his government and widespread discontent with government policy culminated in widespread protest and rebellion, which was met with reprisal by government forces. President Romero increased government education spending, but this won him no popularity with the left. The different police, military and government paramilitary forces launched a bloody repression campaign against leftist groups that ended the lives of 4 Catholic priests and numerous leaders and militants of workers and peasant organizations. He is accused of having ordered the
student massacre of 30 July 1975. Left-wing armed groups responded to the violence exerted by the State with attacks on the security forces and government officials. The repression plunged the country into a serious social crisis.
Overthrow When Nicaraguan president
Anastasio Somoza Debayle was overthrown by the
Sandinista National Liberation Front in July 1979, U.S. government officials began to privately urge Romero to resign to prevent a similar revolution from occurring against his government. At the same time, elements of the Salvadoran military began conspiring a coup to preserve the military's control of the government. The military also viewed Romero as a diplomatic liability due to his government's poor human rights record. Romero was apparently aware that a coup was being conspired against him and he had his family leave El Salvador to the United States on 14 October 1979. On 15 October 1979, junior and reformist military officers initiated a coup against Romero. He surrendered and the rebels allowed Romero and several of his government officials to leave El Salvador at 4:30 p.m. for exile in Guatemala. The coup was bloodless, and by the end of the day, Romero fled El Salvador for Guatemala. Romero was replaced by the civilian-military
Revolutionary Government Junta. Its leaders, Colonels
Adolfo Arnoldo Majano and
Jaime Abdul Gutiérrez, declared Romero, his ministers, the members of the
Legislative Assembly, and the
Supreme Court of Justice to be deposed. The United States was welcoming to news of Romero's overthrow. The coup against Romero marks the beginning of the 12-year-long
Salvadoran Civil War. Romero was El Salvador's last military president. == Personal life ==