Enrique Wong Pujada
Enrique Wong Pujada
Member of Congress
Assumed office
26 July 2021
ConstituencyCallao
In office
26 July 2011  26 July 2016
ConstituencyCallao
Second Vice President of Congress
In office
26 July 2021  26 July 2022
PresidentMaricarmen Alva
Preceded byLuis Roel
Succeeded byDigna Calle
San Martín de Porres District Councilman
In office
1 January 1999  31 December 2002
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
26 July 1985  26 July 1990
ConstituencyCallao
Callao Province Councilman
In office
1 January 1981  31 December 1983
Personal details
Born
Enrique Wong Pujada

(1941-06-26) 26 June 1941
Lima, Peru
Political partyPodemos Perú (2018-present)
Other political
affiliations
National Solidarity (2013-2016)
Alliance for the Great Change (non-affiliated / until 2013)
National Justice (2006)
Vamos Vecino (1990s-2000s)
Peruvian Aprista Party (1980s-1990s)
Alma materEscuela Superior Médica de México
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionMedic

Enrique Wong Pujada (born 26 June 1941, in Lima), is a Peruvian politician of Chinese descent. He was elected as a Congressman of the Republic of Peru in the 2011 elections for the 2011–2016 term, representing Callao. He was elected under the Alliance for the Great Change ticket and later left and joined National Solidarity.[1][2] He was previously a Deputy representing Callao from 1985 to 1990. He was previously a District Councilor representing San Martín de Porres from 1999 to 2002, elected under the Fujimorist Vamos Vecino of Alberto Fujimori. In the 2018 regional elections, he ran for Regional Governor of Callao under the newly Podemos Perú party, but he was not elected, attaining only 3.6% of the vote.

In 1998 he was elected district councilor of San Martín de Porres by the Vamos Vecino movement, a position he held between 1999 and 2002.

In the 2002 regional elections, he unsuccessfully ran for the position of Callao regional councilor for the Independent Movement Chim Pum Callao.

In the general elections of 2006 he ran for Congress for the National Justice party, without being elected. Nor was his candidacy for the provincial mayor of Callao successful in the 2010 regional elections, running for the Mi Callao movement, and losing the elections again, this time against Juan Sotomayor García.

In 1966 he graduated as a doctor at the Medical School of Mexico, and in 1972 he completed a postgraduate degree in internal medicine at the Mexican Institute of Social Security. He served as general manager of his family-founded clinic in San Martín de Porres, Lima, between 2003 and 2009.

Controversy

In 2011 Wong was accused by his sister of mismanaging his family clinic for personal gain and tax avoidance.[3]

References

  1. www.jne.gob.pe, Hoja de vida presentada ante el Jurado Nacional de Elecciones
  2. Callao, congresistas electos 2011, Nota en blog
  3. "Hermana del legislador Wong lo acusa de malos manejos en clínica familiar (Sister of legislator Wong accuses him of mismanagement in family clinic)" (in Spanish). La República. 25 September 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
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