Diógenes Taboada

He completed his secondary studies in the city of Córdoba and received his law degree from the University of Buenos Aires.

He ordered federal interventions in the provinces of Catamarca and Buenos Aires, displacing the most enthusiastic promoter of the "patriotic fraud," Governor Manuel Fresco.

[1] After the 1943 Argentine coup d'état he was one of the most prominent leaders of anti-personalism, and was one of the main organizers of the March of the Constitution and Freedom [es] of September 19, 1945.

[1] During his administration, he attended the Fifth Consultation Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs, in which he did not have a notable participation, since the most vexing issue was the Cuban Revolution and its possible export to other countries in the Caribbean Sea, and the situation caused by the dictatorship in the Dominican Republic.

In the month of July, the chancellor notified Fidel Castro's government of his concern about the growing influence of the Soviet Union in that country.