On 28 July 2006, García was sworn in as president, after winning approximately 53% of the nationwide vote in the elections held on 4 June against
Ollanta Humala. On 28 June, one month before García was sworn in, his party provided 25 of the 79 votes, nearly a third, ratifying the
Peru–United States Trade Promotion Agreement in the
Peruvian Congress. This was a month prior to the new legislature that would include the Union for Peru congressmen, who opposed the agreement with the USA. The
U.S. Congress ratified the agreement on 4 December 2007; it came into effect on 1 February 2009. In his first speech as president, García declared he would appoint a Finance Minister who was neither "an orthodox market liberal" nor a person "excessively in favour of state intervention in the economy". The position of prime minister was given to
Jorge Del Castillo. According to the
BBC, in private interviews García had stated his interest in a possible future trade agreement with Brazil, and considered himself "an admirer" of Brazilian President
Lula da Silva. In press conferences with the foreign press, García acknowledged that the support Humala received in the election "could not be ignored". García, in a recognition of future domestic politics with a UPP-controlled Congress, was quoted as saying "Mr. Humala is an important political figure, and a President should consult with different political factions". at the
White House in October 2006. President Chávez of Venezuela responded to García's comments on his show
Aló Presidente by stating that it was García who owed him an apology, saying: "the only way relations between the two countries can be restored is if Peru's elected President [García] gives an explanation and offers an apology to the Venezuelan people. He started throwing stones". Chávez questioned the legitimacy of the election, citing 1.2 million invalid ballots and a margin of victory of 600,000 votes, although offering no evidence for his comments. García, invited to meet Brazilian president Lula da Silva, responded to Chávez: "Accept your defeat in silence. Don't ask me to apologize for something arising from interference and remarks that are unacceptable under international law." Differences with Chávez were left behind after the two ended their dispute at the second
South American Community of Nations Summit. On 20 July 2006, García named
Luis Carranza, a former executive at
Spain-based
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria and Central Bank director and deputy finance chief from August 2004 to August 2005 in
Alejandro Toledo's government, as finance minister. The appointment was welcomed by some critics of García's fiscal policies during his first administration. However, Mario Huamán Rivera, the President of the
Confederación General de Trabajadores del Perú (General Workers Confederation of Peru), the country's largest
trade union, attacked the appointment, stating that "it looks as though Alan García is not going to fulfill his promise to change economic policy". On the day before his inauguration, García formally named his cabinet, including former Secretary-General of the APRA party and re-elected Congressman
Jorge del Castillo as prime minister, Luis Carranza as minister of finance and economy, and
José Antonio García Belaúnde as foreign affairs minister. García was inaugurated as president on 28 July 2006. During his campaign, García had declared that he supported the
death penalty for rapists of minors; he reiterated this stance while in office, pushing a law on the issue, which would modify the criminal code. Although the issue seemed to be stalled, García widened the range of his proposal for the death penalty by including terrorists in the list of those who could receive it. García faced his first major political defeat of his second term in office on 11 January 2007, when his proposal to introduce the death penalty as a punishment for captured
Shining Path rebels was rejected by the
congress in a vote of 49 to 26. García had promised to introduce the death penalty for Shining Path rebels during the
2006 Presidential election. Following the defeat of the proposal, he suggested a national referendum on the issue, but it was blocked by Congress. Legislators who voted against the bill stated that it would be a breach of the
American Convention on Human Rights, to which Peru is a signatory. Approximately 3,000 supporters of the proposal marched in Lima, holding up photos of victims of attacks by the Shining Path. from Spain in July 2010 On 5 June 2009, García ordered police and military forces to stop Amazonian indigenous protesters from blocking roads in the
Bagua region. They had been demonstrating against the signing by Alan García of special decrees that allowed foreign corporations to enter Indigenous lands for oil drilling, mining and logging. As a result of the protests and armed military incursion, more than 100 native civilians and 14 policemen were killed. The government claimed, in a redacted television commercial, that several policemen were killed after being taken prisoner, while protesters claimed the bodies of the murdered
Native Amazonians had been dumped into the river. With the passage of time, studies of human rights violations in Peru have discovered a close relationship between García and forces within Peru who promote impunity for human rights violators, through his involvement in appointing judges who would be sympathetic to perpetrators of human rights violations. García was also supportive of efforts to punish judges who handed down indictments of perpetrators. García himself was in the presidency during many gross violations of human rights and was quite hostile to
human rights organizations and to judicial actors who sought justice for victims of human rights violations. During his presidency, García sought to tilt the legal playing field in favour of the military and against victims. He also tried to make life difficult for
NGOs seeking to help victims: he offered extensive resources to defendants and military officers, while creating new laws that would make it difficult for human rights NGOs to do their jobs, receive necessary resources, and pursue the advancement of judicial action that attempted to bring human rights violators to justice.
Foreign affairs Dmitry Medvedev in Lima on 24 November 2008
Barack Obama in Washington, D.C., on 1 June 2010 member states in 2010 After being elected, in the months prior to his inauguration, García sought to heal Peru's relationship with
Chile, strained by the differences between the governments of
Alejandro Toledo and
Ricardo Lagos and severely impaired by former President
Alberto Fujimori's extradition affair. García's intentions were well received by
Michelle Bachelet, President of Chile, as she and García met and struck some preliminary agreements. These conversations eventually led to the final draft of a landmark economic agreement with Chile a month after García was sworn in. On 9 November 2006, three months after being inaugurated, García signed 12 commercial agreements with President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of
Brazil, strengthening the relationship between the two countries. As part of the
IIRSA programme and continuing integration efforts – including the August 2006 negotiations between
Petrobras and
Petroperú – these new agreements sought to further bilateral cooperation. García offered Peruvian
hydropower to meet Brazil's growing energy needs, although further details were not disclosed. ==Post-presidency (2011–2019)==