Isaac Mekler
Isaac Mekler
Member of Congress
In office
26 July 2006  26 July 2011
ConstituencyCallao
Personal details
Born
Isaac Mekler Neiman

(1959-07-09) 9 July 1959
Lima, Peru
Nationality Peruvian
Political partyAlliance for Progress (2016-present)
National Solidarity Party (2009-2013)
Peruvian Nationalist Party (2005-2009)
Other political
affiliations
Alliance for the Progress of Peru (2016)
National Solidarity Alliance (2010-2011)
Union for Peru (2006)
Alma materPontifical Catholic University of Peru
OccupationPolitician

Isaac Mekler Neiman (born 9 July 1959) is a Peruvian politician and a former Congressman representing the Constitutional Province of Callao for the 2006–2011 term. Originally from the Peruvian Nationalist Party, Mekler switched to the National Solidarity Party of Luis Castañeda in 2009. In the 2011 elections, he lost his seat he ran for re-election under the National Solidarity Alliance of former Lima Mayor Luis Castañeda but he was not re-elected.

He was the leader of the Association of Jews in Peru as of December 2005.

Education

He studied at the León Pinelo School in the city of Lima. He later studied the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, where he studied law.

Political career

Congressman

Mekler was affiliated with the Peruvian Nationalist Party of Ollanta Humala. In the 2006 elections, he won a seat, representing Constitutional Province of Callao and served for the 2006–2011 term.[1] In 2009, he switched to the National Solidarity Party of Luis Castañeda. In the 2011 elections, he lost his seat he ran for re-election under the National Solidarity Alliance of former Lima Mayor Luis Castañeda but he was not re-elected.

Post-congressional term

In the 2016 election, he ran for a seat again in Congress, this time switching to the constituency of Lima under the Alliance for the Progress of Peru of former Governor of La Libertad Cesar Acuña Peralta which grouped the Alliance for Progress, National Restoration and We Are Peru, but was once again, he was unsuccessful.

References

  1. "Ficha de Congresista". Congreso de la Republica del Peru. Retrieved 29 December 2010.


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