In 1940, Prío was elected senator of
Pinar del Río Province. Four years later, fellow
Partido Auténtico member
Ramón Grau became president, and during the Grau administration Prío served turns as Minister of Public Works, Minister of Labor and Prime Minister. On July 1, 1948, he was elected president of Cuba as a member of the Partido Auténtico. Prío was assisted by Chief of the Armed Forces General Genovevo Pérez Dámera and Colonel José Luis Chinea Cárdenas, who had previously been in charge of the Province of Santa Clara. The eight years under Grau and Prío, were, according to Charles Ameringer, [...] unique in Cuban history. They were a time of constitutional order and political freedom. They were not 'golden years' by any means, but in two elections (1944 and 1948), Cubans had the opportunity to express their desire for a rule of civil liberties, primacy of Cuban culture, and achievement of economic independence. If there were sharp contradictions in Cuban society under the Auténticos, the circumstances differed only in degree from the complexities and dynamics encountered in free societies everywhere (how often did Cubans compare Havana with Chicago?). Prío, called
el presidente cordial ("the cordial president"), was committed to a rule marked by civility, primarily in its respect for freedom of expression. Several public-works projects and the establishment of a National Bank and Tribunal of Accounts count among his successes. However, violence among political factions and reports of theft and self-enrichment in the government ranks marred Prío's term. The Prío administration increasingly came to be perceived by the public as ineffectual in the face of violence and corruption, much as the Grau administration before it. With elections scheduled for the middle of 1952, rumors surfaced of a planned
military coup by long-shot presidential contender
Fulgencio Batista. Prío, seeing no constitutional basis to act, did not do so. The rumors proved to be true. On March 10, 1952, Batista and his collaborators
seized military and police commands throughout the country and occupied major radio and TV stations. Batista assumed power when Prío, failing to mount a resistance, boarded a plane and went into exile. According to
Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Prío later said of his presidency: They say that I was a terrible president of Cuba. That may be true. But I was the best president Cuba ever had. In 1953 he appeared in court over violations of the
Neutrality Act, specifically "conspiracy to export arms and implements of war from the United States without license". He pled not guilty. In 1977, several weeks before his death, he travelled to Washington, DC with other Miami Cubans to express their opposition over any detente with Cuba to the
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. == Personal life and death ==