Soon after, he aligned with the conservatives in the political fights that were wracking Chile at the time. As aforementioned, in 1824, Portales' business firm acquired control over the government's monopoly of tobacco, tea, and liquor; however, the country's troubled conditions soon thwarted his profitable business. For these reasons, Portales finally entered into the political sphere, and very soon he would become the intellectual leader of the conservative side. He helped to reorganize the conservative party, and, in 1827, founded El Hambriento (or The Starveling), a journal attacking liberal idealists known as the pipiolos ("white beaks") from Portales' party's (a.k.a. the pelucones or "big wigs") perspective. Portales was an effective satirist, contributing several popular articles to The Starveling. Portales' articles placed him in the limelight and paved the way for his political career. After the triumph of the conservatives in the Revolution of 1829, President
José Tomás Ovalle y Bezanilla named him
Minister of the Interior and Foreign Affairs on April 6, 1830, remaining until May 1831. He was named again to that position by President
Fernando Errázuriz Aldunate on July 9, 1831, and remained until August 31, 1831, and named once again by President
José Joaquín Prieto from November 9, 1835, to January 1837. Something similar happened with his nomination as minister of war and navy from April 6, 1830, until May 1831; then from July 9, 1831, until December 1832 and from September 21, 1835, to September 1836. There was an assassination attempt on Portales in November 1836; the assassin was shot and killed.
Political philosophy In 1822, before his rise to power Portales wrote to a friend:Politics doesn't interest me, but as a good citizen I feel free to express my opinions and to censure the government. Democracy, which is so loudly proclaimed by the deluded is an absurdity in our countries, flooded as they are with vices and with their citizens lacking all sense of civic virtue, the prerequisite to establishing a real Republic. But monarchy is not the American ideal either; if we get out of one terrible government just to jump headlong into another, what will we have gained? The Republican system is the one which we must adopt, but do you know how I interpret it for our countries? A strong central government whose representatives will be men of true virtue and patriotism, and who thus can direct the citizens along the path of order and progress. These words are demonstrative of the skepticism in pure democracies that the recently failed French revolution impressed upon many. Portales believed that to avoid disaster it was most important to create a stable and functioning government, rather than one ruled by lofty but ultimately impractical ideals. He believed in a peaceful but strong central government, and that in order to successfully run a state or country, citizens must be virtuous and patriotic ==Assassination==