Early political career Daniel Mora was a founding member of the
Possible Peru party of former president
Alejandro Toledo in 2000. In the
2000 general elections, he unsuccessfully ran for Congress for the
We Are Peru party of then Lima Mayor
Alberto Andrade. Since his adhesion, he has held different executive positions in the party organisation. In Toledo's administration, Mora was secretary-general in the Ministry of Transport and Communication from 2002 to 2003, head of the advisory staff of the same ministry, and chairman of the National Intelligence Council (CNI), from 2003 to 2004. From 2005 to 2006 he was a presidential counsellor in the
Peruvian Government Palace, assigned to decentralization. In the
2006 general elections, Mora ran for a seat in Congress, representing the
Constitutional Province of Callao under the Possible Peru party, but he was not elected.
Congressman In the
2011 general election, Daniel Mora was elected to the Congress on the
Possible Peru Alliance list to represent the
Constitutional Province of Callao. On 28 July 2011, newly elected president
Ollanta Humala appointed him as
Minister of Defense, due to a coalition agreement between Possible Peru and Humala's
Peru Wins movement. He resigned when the cabinet was reshuffled on 11 December 2011. During his congressional term, he distanced himself from
Possible Peru. In August 2013, when he was president of the Education Commission of the
Congress of the Republic, he gave the forum
"The university in the 21st century, new university law and its autonomy" at the
Jorge Basadre Grohmann National University, where he proposed the
University Law 30220, of which he was the greatest promoter. This law gave the modern University Reform in Peru and also created the controversial National Superintendence of Higher University Education (
SUNEDU).
Post-congressional career In 2016, he was presented as a founding member of the
Purple Party led by
Julio Guzmán. In September 2020, he joined the Patriotic Front of jailed rebel leader
Antauro Humala that is affiliated with the
Union for Peru. He later left the Patriotic Front in aftermath of the
removal of Martín Vizcarra. == Controversies ==