An affiliate of the
Radical Civic Union (UCR), Fiad first ran for office in the
2009 legislative election as the first candidate in the
Social and Civic Agreement list to the
National Chamber of Deputies in Jujuy. Despite being a newcomer with little public recognition, Fiad's received 30.94% of the votes and was the second-most voted list in the province, enough for Fiad to be elected. He took office on 10 December 2009. In 2011, Fiad was the UCR candidate for
governor of Jujuy as part of the
Union for Social Development (UDESO) alliance. He stood against
Justicialist Party candidate and former governor
Eduardo Fellner. Fiad received 25.89% of the vote and came in a distant second against Fellner's 57.53%. Fiad was re-elected as deputy in
2013 as the first candidate in the Frente Jujeño list, which was the most-voted in the province with 39.81% of the vote. Just two years later, however, he resigned from his seat in order to take charge of Jujuy's Ministry of Health in the new government of Gerardo Morales, who had been elected governor in the October 2015 provincial elections. In
2017, Fiad was elected to the
National Senate on the
Cambiemos list, alongside
Silvia Giacoppo, which was once again the most-voted list in Jujuy with 52.60% of the vote. He took office on 10 December 2017, with mandate until 2023. In 2010, as deputy, Fiad voted against the
legalisation of same-sex marriage in Argentina, despite most of the UCR (including the party's leader in Jujuy,
Gerardo Morales) supporting the measure. Fiad was also a vocal opponent of the
legalisation of abortion, voting against the two
Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy bills debated by the Argentine Congress in 2018 and 2020. By contrast, in 2012, Fiad supported a number of bills seeking the
decriminalisation of drug possession for personal use, arguing that drug addictions ought to be considered diseases, not crimes. In 2015, he proposed the establishment of a direct emergency line to denounce the illegal sale of drugs. ==References==