Ernesto Alfredo Castro Aldana (born 26 May 1971) is a Salvadoran politician and businessman who currently serves as the
president of the
Legislative Assembly of El Salvador. Castro previously served as a secretary and private advisor to
Nayib Bukele from 2012 to 2020 when he was elected as a deputy of the Legislative Assembly from
San Salvador in the
2021 legislative election.
Early career
Ernesto Alfredo Castro Aldana[1] was born on 26 May 1971.[2][3] He has degrees in Business Administration and Marketing Studies.[4] Castro is a businessman. Before entering politics, Castro worked as an external consultant to various companies and institutions, including serving as the general director of Grupo Tres y Punto.[1] In 2006, Castro,
Nayib Bukele,
Karim Bukele, and Andrés García founded 503, S.A de C.V., a restaurant management company.[5][6]
Early political career
From 2012 to 2015, Castro was Bukele's secretary and private advisor while he served as mayor of
Nuevo Cuscatlán from 2012 to 2015. From 2015 to 2018, Castro continued to serve as Bukele's secretary and private advisor while he was serving as
mayor of San Salvador.[4][7] Castro was a founding member of
Nuevas Ideas, a political party established by Bukele in 2017.[5] Castro continued to serve as Bukele's private secretary after Bukele assumed the
presidency on 1 June 2019.[4][7] During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Castro supported the
nationwide lockdowns implemented by Bukele's government.[1] Castro resigned as Bukele's secretary and private advisor in 2020 to seek public office in the
2021 legislative election.[8]
On 20 July 2020, Castro was elected as a candidate for deputy of the
Legislative Assembly as a member of Nuevas Ideas.[9] As a candidate, Castro stated that "we will attack the issue of
corruption, we will consolidate the issue of transparency, we will address the issue of accountability, we will avoid and break all those oligarchic monopolies" ("vamos atacar el tema de la corrupción, vamos a consolidar el tema de la transparencia, vamos a hacer el tema de la rendición de cuentas, vamos a evitar y vamos a quebrar todos esos monopolios oligárquicos").[10] On 28 February 2021, Castro received 57,733 marks—the most of any candidate—and was elected as a deputy to the Legislative Assembly; he was one of 56 Nuevas Ideas deputies to be elected.[11]
President of the Legislative Assembly
Prior to assuming office as a deputy, an opinion poll conducted by La Prensa Gráfica from 20 to 26 April 2021 found that 6.6 percent of respondents believed that Castro would be the best option to serve as
president of the Legislative Assembly, the highest percent received by any individual.[12] Castro assumed office on 1 May 2021, and 64 out of the 84 deputies of the Legislative Assembly voted to elect Castro as the president of the Legislative Assembly.[13][a] That same day, Castro
voted with the Nuevas Ideas-led Legislative Assembly to remove Attorney General Raúl Melara and five
Supreme Court justices from the constitutional court.[15]
On 11 March 2022, Castro was named as the president pro-tempore of the Forum of Presidents of Legislative Branches of Central America, the Caribbean Basin, and Mexico (FOPREL) for the 2022–2023 term,[16] succeeding
Sergio Gutiérrez of
Mexico.[17] Castro left office on 10 March 2023 and was succeeded by his vice president pro-tempore,
Alfredo Pacheco of the
Dominican Republic.[18]
In December 2022, Bukele suggested reducing the total number of
municipalities in El Salvador from 262 to 50.[19] In February 2023, Castro confirmed that Nuevas Ideas was not only evaluating a proposal to reduce the number of municipalities from 262 to 50, but that the party was also evaluating a proposal to reduce the number of seats on the Legislative Assembly from 84 to 64.[20] Ultimately, in June 2023, Castro voted with the Nuevas Ideas-led Legislative Assembly to reduce the number of municipalities from 262 to 44 and the number of seats on the Legislative Assembly from 84 to 60. Opposition politicians claimed that the reductions were attempts by Nuevas Ideas to consolidate power and diminish the political representation of smaller political parties.[21][22][23]
On 20 February 2023, Castro announced that he was running for re-election to the Legislative Assembly in the
2024 general election. He also stated that most deputies from Nuevas Ideas would also be seeking re-election.[24] On 9 July 2023, Castro secured one of Nuevas Ideas' 16 nominations for the legislative seats of San Salvador.[25] In December 2022, Castro stated that Nuevas Ideas aimed to win 70 seats in the Legislative Assembly,[26] but after the reduction of legislative seats and municipalities, Castro stated that the party now aimed to win all 60 seats in the Legislative Assembly and all 44 municipalities.[27] Castro's projections were criticized by opposition politicians who described them as being "undemocratic" ("antidemocrática") and an attempt to "concentrate power" ("concentrar el poder").[28] In the lead up to the election, Castro attended four reunions with Salvadoran
expatriates living in the
United States; the four reunions Castro attended were held in
Houston,[29]Los Angeles,[30]New York City,[31] and
Washington, D.C.[32] Castro won re-election during the 2024 legislative election.[33]
On 1 May 2024, Castro was re-elected as the president of the Legislative Assembly.[34]
Political positions
Castro opposes the legalization of
abortion in El Salvador. In March 2023, Castro wrote on
Twitter that "there is not even the slightest possibility" ("no existe ni la más mínima posibilidad") that the Nuevas Ideas-led Legislative Assembly would vote in favor of legalizing abortion.[35]
Personal life
Castro is married to
Michelle Sol. Sol succeeded Bukele as mayor of Nuevo Cuscatlán, serving from 2015 to 2018; is the incumbent
minister of housing, serving since 2019;[36] and is seeking election as mayor of La Libertad Este in the 2024 general election.[37] Sol is a niece of
Ana Ligia Mixco Sol de Saca, the former
first lady of El Salvador from 2004 to 2009.[38]
As of November 2022, Castro has a net worth of around US$881,000 and receives a monthly salary of US$5,700.[39] In February 2023, the El Faro digital newspaper revealed that Castro and Sol's cooking company, Sociedad Castro Sol S.A. de C.V., had received US$504,000 in 18 checks from Salvadoran President
Mauricio Funes between September 2010 and August 2011 to provide food and cook for the Presidential Battalion. El Faro alleged that the payments came from a
black budget managed by Funes during his presidency.[36]
^"El Salvador". Parline: the IPU's Open Data Platform. 5 July 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
^
abc"Ernesto Castro Aldana". Government of El Salvador (in Spanish). 8 April 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
^
abLabrador, Gabriel; Quintanilla, Jaime; Arauz, Sergio; Alvarado, Jimmy (2 June 2019).
"Amigos, Socios y Parientes en el Nuevo Gobierno" [Friends, Partners, and Relatives in the New Government]. El Faro (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 September 2023.
^Moreno, Karen (22 November 2022). Barrera, Ezequiel; Hernández, Karina (eds.).
"Los Más Ricos de la Nueva Asamblea" [The Richest of the New Assembly]. Gato Encerrado (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 September 2023.