Elections were held on 17 June 1956. The official results were as follows: Manuel Prado Ugarteche, 568,134 votes (45.5%);
Fernando Belaunde Terry, 457,638 votes (36.7%) and Hernando de Lavalle, 222,323 votes (17.8%). in September 1961 During Prado's second presidency (1956–1962), the only significant proscribed party was the APRA (
American Popular Revolutionary Alliance), which was thrown out of power and outlawed in 1948 by President
Manuel Odría. Prado announced that he would submit to the newly elected Congress a bill to legalize APRA once again. The bill was later passed and the APRA's famed founder,
Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, returned from foreign exile. This government developed in a climate of turmoil motivated by the economic crisis that presented itself with increasingly alarming characteristics; because of the turmoil that arose in the countryside in favor of the realization of land reform and a vigorous campaign of national scope for the recovery of the oil fields of
La Brea and Pariñas that illegally continued to operate the American company
International Petroleum Company. The leadership of the opposition was assumed by the architect Belaunde, who organized a new mass party: People's Action, which was preparing for the next general election, where he would have prominence. The newspapers El Comercio y La Prensa also made opposition, which could not counter La Crónica, a newspaper owned by the Prado family, because it was more oriented to sports and police issues. In the economic order, the biggest problem was budgetary in nature, which had as its origin the recession produced in the United States in 1957. Export products were significantly depreciated and dollars were scarce, so the Peruvian currency was devalued. Pedro G. Beltrán, the director of the newspaper La Prensa, then went on to support the government (1959) was appointed as Minister of Finance and President of the Council of Ministers. The mission was to put finance in order, balance the budget and stabilize the currency, which was achieved, not without first adopting anti-popular measures such as rising gasoline, cutting food subsidies and increasing the tax burden. It was a liberal policy. In those years the migrations of the mountains developed a lot and the slums around Lima increased, to the point of talking about the "belt of misery" that was beginning to surround the capital. Overall, Prado did not do much to improve the situation and condition of the national majority that continued to live in terrible conditions. As the end of government approached, popular discontent was undeniable. The strikes were slashed and boisterous and even violent protests were made in the streets. In addition to economic policy, the president's own personality, pompous and frivolous in difficult times, was criticized. On a personal level, Prado managed in 1958 to get the
Catholic Church to annul his marriage to Enriqueta Garland so he could marry the
Limeña lady
Clorinda Málaga, which caused little scandal among the conservative sector of Limegna society. In 1961 he was the first foreign head of state to visit Japan after World War II.
Important works and facts The main facts of this government include: • The Industrial Promotion Act was given, which promoted the country's still fledgling industrial development. • The National Fund for Economic Development was created in each department for the execution of public works as a manifestation of administrative decentralization. • A steel plant was installed in the port of
Chimbote, with which the country intended to emulate the industrialization efforts of other Latin American nations. Chimbote was also already the most important fishing port and its explosive growth was one of the most jumping social phenomena of that time. • He began taking off from the fishmeal industry, until he made Peru the first fishing power on the planet, a credit that was due to the talented Peruvian businessman
Luis Banchero Rossi. • Peru's strong rights defense was made in the face of Ecuador's campaign in America to ignore the Rio de Janeiro Protocol of 1942. • Faced with the peasant demand for land reform, Prado limited himself to the creation of an Institute of Agrarian Reform and Colonization (IRAC), with the "immediate purpose of studying, proposing and, where possible, implementing the necessary measures to increase the cultivated area by colonizing the forest, spreading small and medium-sized property and preferentially seeking the establishment of family farms", whose studies were resumed by the following governments. • The new BAP cruisers Almirante Grau and BAP Coronel Bolognesi were acquired and came to replace the first cruisers of similar names that had been acquired 50 years ago, in the first government of José Pardo and Barreda. They would provide services until the early 1980s. • The creation of the Joint Command of the Armed Forces, an institution that groups the commandos of the three defensive weapons of the Republic: Army, Navy and Aviation. • The reform of secondary education being divided into Letters and Sciences from the fourth year. Technical secondary education was improved but primary education was neglected. • Diplomatic relations with Cuba were broken after the triumph of the
Communist Revolution and its orientation towards the
Soviet bloc. • Peru's integration into the Alliance for Progress that then-U.S. President
John F. Kennedy led to as a means of developing Latin America. • An agreement was signed with
Bolivia for the use of the waters of Lake Titicaca for irrigation works in areas surrounding and common to both countries. • During the summer of 1958–59 the
Puno Region was the scene of a disastrous drought that devastated the population. For this purpose, the 'Southern Plan' was developed to revitalize this area. • Television was established in Peru, armed by the Industrial Promotion Act (1958). Soon after, the first television stations emerged.
Removal by coup d'état At the end of his government Prado called elections, with the main candidates being: •
Victor Raul Haya de la Torre, by the Aprista Party. • The architect
Fernando Belaunde Terry, for the Popular Action party. • The general and former president
Manuel A. Odría, for his national Odrist Union party. The elections were held on 10 June 1962. At the end of the count no candidate had obtained the one-third of the votes as required by the Political Constitution at the time, necessitating that Congress choose among those who had obtained the most votes, which were the three mentioned above. The situation required a pact between at least two of these three main opponents. Unusually for some, the pact was made between the two staunch enemies, Hague and Odría, remembering that the latter would assume the presidency of the republic. But the government was accused of having committed fraud in some departments, so the Joint Command of the Armed Forces presided over by General
Ricardo Pérez Godoy demanded that the government annul the elections. The
Peruvian Armed Forces had been opposed to the Prado administration as it made reformist measures focused on civilian life, which resulted with the military receiving less support from the traditional elites and the Catholic Church. On 18 July 1962, the guard of the Government Palace was absent and at 3:20 am, an armored division commanded by Colonel Gonzalo Briceño Zevallos stormed the palace and arrested the president and his companions, who foresaw a possible coup d'état. On the same day Prado was transported to
Callao's naval arsenal and embarked on the Callao BAP (anchored on San Lorenzo Island) where he was detained until the end of his term on 28 July. On 1 August he voluntarily left the country and settled in Paris. A military governing board was formed that overturned the elections and convened new ones. It has been said that the real motive of this institutional coup of the Armed Forces was the anti-aprism still deeply rooted among the military, who did not want the APRA to rule, even in co-government. == Later life ==