Manuel Cobo Vega (born 18 June 1956)[1] is a Spanish People's Party (PP) politician.
He served in the Assembly of Madrid from 1991 to 2003, where he was finance minister. He followed his mentor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón into the local politics of Madrid, as a member of the city council from 2003 to 2012. He was deputy mayor and briefly acting mayor of the city. Following ill health and a double lung transplant, he returned to politics in 2023 as a member of the Congress of Deputies.
Biography
Born in Ponferrada, Province of León, Cobo earned a law degree from the Complutense University of Madrid (1978), a diploma in business consultancy from Madrid's School of Legal Practice (1984) and a Master of Business Administration from ICADE in 1986.[1]
Cobo was elected to the Assembly of Madrid in 1991, and became secretary general of the People's Party (PP) group. Re-elected in 1995, he became the party's spokesman. He served as the finance minister in the government of Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón.[1]
In 2003, both Cobo and Ruiz-Gallardón made the move from regional to municipal politics, as deputy mayor and mayor of Madrid, respectively.[1] Cobo was acting mayor from 22 to 27 December 2011, between his mentor's resignation and the inauguration of Ana Botella.[2] He too left the city council early the following year, to become the management coordinator at IFEMA, the Madrid railway body. He turned down an offer to work in the Ministry of Justice, led by Ruiz-Gallardón, as he felt that he did not have the right profile for it.[3]
Cobo left his role at IFEMA in September 2015 and announced that December that he was quitting politics, for personal reasons.[1] He was unable to take the seat in the Congress of Deputies that he had won in that year's general election for his native province's constituency; in 2017 he resigned shortly after being named in charge of an anti-corruption drive in the PP. The cause of his resignations was ill health from his smoking; after nearly losing the ability to speak, he underwent a double lung transplant in 2020.[4]
In April 2022, he was announced as part of the PP leadership of new leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo.[5] He was named 7th on the PP list for the Madrid constituency in the 2023 Spanish general election,[4] and was elected.[6]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Manuel Cobo deja la política por motivos personales" [Manuel Cobo leaves politics for personal reasons]. Diario de Mallorca (in Spanish). EFE. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "Manuel Cobo, alcalde accidental" [Manuel Cobo, accidental mayor] (in Spanish). Libertad Digital. 22 December 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "Cobo se va a Ifema y dice que rechazó un cargo en Justicia por no dar el "perfil"" [Cobo leaves for IFEMA and says that he rejected a role in the Ministry of Justice because he did not have the right "profile"] (in Spanish). Libertad Digital. 29 December 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ a b "Feijóo incluye al berciano Manuel Cobo con el número 7 en la lista del PP por Madrid" [Feijóo includes El Bierzo native Manuel Cobo as number 7 on the PP list for Madrid] (in Spanish). Bierzo Diario. 14 June 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ Boya, Luis (2 April 2022). "El político berciano, Manuel Cobo, elegido por Feijóo para formar parte de la nueva dirección del PP" [Manuel Cobo, politician from El Bierzo, chosen by Feijóo to form part of the new PP leadership] (in Spanish). Info Bierzo. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "Estos son los diputados y senadores en la Comunidad de Madrid en las elecciones generales 2023" [These are the deputies and senators for the Community of Madrid in the 2023 general election]. 20 minutos (in Spanish). 24 July 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- 1956 births
- Living people
- People from Ponferrada
- Politicians from Castile and León
- Complutense University of Madrid alumni
- People's Party (Spain) politicians
- Members of the 3rd Assembly of Madrid
- Members of the 4th Assembly of Madrid
- Members of the 5th Assembly of Madrid
- Government ministers of the Community of Madrid
- Madrid city councillors (2003–2007)
- Madrid city councillors (2007–2011)
- Madrid city councillors (2011–2015)
- Mayors of Madrid
- Members of the 15th Congress of Deputies (Spain)
- Lung transplant recipients